“We have just anything you could think of,” Amy Small says of the Texas State Law Library, where she is executive director. Open to all—no attorney license required—the library serves everyday Texans and the Supreme Court alike. In this episode, hosts Jody Sanders and Todd Smith invite Amy to unpack the library’s often-overlooked resources: remote access to HeinOnline, historical statutes back to 1879, eBooks with persistent annotations, Westlaw and Lexis access on the library’s public computers, and several dictionary collections. If your online research skills need a refresher, watch on YouTube as Amy shares her screen and navigates a database in real time. Stay tuned in as Amy recalls fielding a seventh-grade classroom’s question about the weirdest law in Texas. Hint: It has something to do with astronauts and voting.
The Texas State Law Library accepts questions by phone from 8 a.m. to 4:45 p.m., Monday through Friday, and on its website.
Visual references are included in this episode. Watch on YouTube to follow along with Amy’s screen shares.
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Welcome to the Texas
Appellate Law Podcast,
Speaker:the show that takes you inside the
Texas and federal appellate systems.
Speaker:Through conversations with judges, court
staff, top trial and appellate lawyers,
Speaker:academics, and innovators,
Speaker:we provide practical insights to help
you become a more effective advocate.
Speaker:Whether you're handling
appeals or preparing for trial,
Speaker:you'll discover strategies to sharpen
your arguments, innovate your practice,
Speaker:and stay ahead of the latest
developments. And now here are your hosts,
Speaker:Todd Smith and Jody Sanders.
Produced and powered by LawPods.
Speaker:Welcome back to the Texas Appellate
Law Podcast. I'm Jody Sanders.
Speaker:And I'm Todd Smith.
Speaker:And our guest today is Amy Small.
Speaker:Amy is the executive director of
the Texas State Law Library. Amy,
Speaker:thanks for joining us.
Speaker:Hi, thanks so much for having me today.
Speaker:Some of our listeners may have seen you
in some of your CLE presentations that
Speaker:you've done,
Speaker:but just give us a little
bit of background on you
and kind of how you got to
Speaker:the job that you are now.
Speaker:So I have actually worked here since 2007.
Speaker:I started as a librarian. It was
my first job out of library school.
Speaker:And when I went to library school,
Speaker:at the time I didn't know what kind
of library I wanted to go into.
Speaker:So I kind of cast my net very wide
and was fortunate to get a job
Speaker:at the law library. At the time,
Speaker:the sort of philosophy was that I had
customer service experience and I had some
Speaker:technology experience that
maybe couldn't be trained as
Speaker:easily as legal research was.
Speaker:So even though I didn't have any
legal background at the time,
Speaker:they gave me a shot and I really liked
it. I was fortunate that they liked me.
Speaker:And since then I've held a
variety of positions here.
Speaker:So at this point I've been
exposed to a lot of the different
Speaker:functions and services that the library
offers. We do a whole lot of stuff that
Speaker:people might not know about. So I've
been an electronic services librarian,
Speaker:which meant that I managed some of our
databases and I did a little bit of
Speaker:coding for our internal app. I
managed our inmate copy service.
Speaker:We do a lot of correspondence with people
who are incarcerated in the Department
Speaker:of Criminal Justice Prisons, helping
them access their appellate records,
Speaker:file writs, those sorts of things. So I
helped with that, did the finances here.
Speaker:And then for the past, I
guess it's now three years.
Speaker:I forget whether it's been three or
four years, but I've been the director.
Speaker:So all of that experience, helping
people find legal information,
Speaker:understanding what people are looking
for and specifically people of all kinds.
Speaker:We do serve the whole
state and everybody in it.
Speaker:You don't have to be an attorney to
use our library. So we do have a lot of
Speaker:everyday people coming to us with
questions about the law. At the same time,
Speaker:we directly serve the high courts.
Speaker:So we have a specific legislative mandate
to serve the Supreme Court Court of
Speaker:Criminal Appeals and the
appellate courts. So with that,
Speaker:we have a wide variety
of people that we help.
Speaker:And so we have a wide variety of items
and types of item in our collection.
Speaker:Everything from literally
wills for dummies to Dursanios,
Speaker:treatises from British law treatises
in our archives from the: Speaker:everything in between. I'm lucky
that I really enjoy what we do.
Speaker:I think I find it really interesting.
And over the past few years,
Speaker:I've tried to do a better job of
getting out to the community and
Speaker:saying, Hey,
Speaker:you might not know that we're here and
you might not know all of this stuff that
Speaker:we have for you that is free. So making
sure that people know that this is a
Speaker:tool available to them to
utilize in their practices.
Speaker:Let's start with a basic question.
Where is the state law library?
Speaker:If someone wants to
come, where do they go?
Speaker:Absolutely. So we're in the
capital complex in downtown Austin.
Speaker:We are sort of in a building that got
glued on to the Supreme Court building in
Speaker:the 90s.
Speaker:Accurate.
Speaker:Accurate. Yeah.
Speaker:And there are leaks in the building
where we got glued on where it wasn't.
Speaker:So you can tell exactly
where the addition was,
Speaker:but the brief history of the library is
that we were originally the library for
Speaker:the Supreme Court created in the 1850s
very shortly after the Supreme Court was
Speaker:created.
Speaker:And so we've kind of been obviously for
a long time we were part of the Supreme
Speaker:Court, but due to circumstances,
funding, staffing,
Speaker:it became apparent in the 1960s that it
would be more efficient for us to break
Speaker:off as a separate agency.
So we did so.: Speaker:we officially became our
own independent agency,
Speaker:but we still have the really
strong ties to the court.
Speaker:So we're right next door to
the Third Court of Appeals.
Speaker:We're in sort of the same building as
the Court of Criminal Appeals and the
Speaker:Supreme Court and we're kind
of catty-corner diagonal
from the Texas Law Center.
Speaker:We're open to the public eight
to five, Monday through Friday.
Speaker:Anybody is free welcome to come in and
use all of our resources that we have
Speaker:here.
Speaker:So you don't have to have a library card
or any sort of subscription to show up
Speaker:and use it?
Speaker:No, no. If you would like
to use our computers,
Speaker:you need a free library account, but
you can sign up for one of those online.
Speaker:Free, it's simple. If you want to check
out books, you're more than welcome.
Speaker:We ask for a little bit more information
in that case address where we can
Speaker:contact you if you abscond with
our materials. But we also,
Speaker:that's not even necessary because we
do have free scanners that everyone can
Speaker:use. Some of them have document feeders.
So for those nice loose leaf materials,
Speaker:you can just stick it in and scan.
Speaker:I do want to stress also that we
want to be accessible as possible to
Speaker:the population. Austin has a large deaf
population and a large blind population.
Speaker:And so we have resources so that
people with disabilities can still
Speaker:use our materials.
Speaker:We have a book scanner that will
scan and either speak it back to you
Speaker:or actually record an MP3 that you
can email to yourself. It's so cool.
Speaker:We just got it a few years
ago and it's awesome.
Speaker:And we also have screen magnifiers and
text magnifiers so that if you have some
Speaker:vision, you can magnify the
text. Same on the computers.
Speaker:So we are open and willing to
help anyone of all ability.
Speaker:Is it still possible, Amy,
Speaker:to do what I used to do
in my first experiences in
your library and make a good
Speaker:old fashioned copy of
a page out of a book?
Speaker:We do still have a copy machine.
It is less utilized than ...
Speaker:Because I remember when I first started,
Speaker:firms would send couriers all the
time to come in and make copies of the
Speaker:appellate records from the Supreme
Court and the Court of Criminal Appeals.
Speaker:And we don't see that all these days,
Speaker:but that used to be a brisk
business for us. So if you want,
Speaker:you can make a copy.
Speaker:Also have a copy service where if
you don't want to make the trip,
Speaker:you can give us a call.
Speaker:We'll request the file from
those three high courts and then
Speaker:email it to you or send you the
physical copies if you prefer that.
Speaker:Wow, that's great service. I wish
I'd known about that 20 years ago.
Speaker:Yes. Saved you some time
and effort I'm sure.
Speaker:I can't wait to come in and try
one of those scanners though.
Speaker:They're really cool. And this is sort
of getting a little bit in the weeds,
Speaker:but one of them has a thumb eraser so
that if you're copying a big book and have
Speaker:to use your thumbs to
press the pages down,
Speaker:it'll take that out and make it
look a little bit cleaner, more pro.
Speaker:If we could find a place to
record on location there,
Speaker:we might just have to do that.
Speaker:Yeah, there you go.
Speaker:Todd,
Speaker:I think we're going to have to do a
podcast field trip the next time I'm in
Speaker:Austin. We're going to have to come in.
Speaker:That's another resource
that our library offers.
Speaker:We have a conference room that can be
reserved by members of the public or
Speaker:attorneys at small firms maybe who
don't have a meeting room if you need to
Speaker:record a deposition.
Speaker:We have that that on our website
you can see the calendar and make a
Speaker:reservation.
Speaker:That is kind of transitioning into
the next thing I want to talk about,
Speaker:which is what are the resources
that you offer? I mean,
Speaker:there's a lot of lawyers that have kind
of their set things that they do in
Speaker:their office or maybe they
have a local law library,
Speaker:but what are some things that are
available at the state law library that
Speaker:lawyers may not realize are there or they
might realize they can get through the
Speaker:state law library?
Speaker:The first thing I think worth mentioning
is that a lot of people here that were
Speaker:based in Austin and say,
"Well, that's great,
Speaker:but I'm in El Paso or I'm in
Lubbock. What did that do for me?
Speaker:" That same question
was posed over and over,
Speaker:specifically when we went
to the legislature to ask
for money to keep continuing
Speaker:and saying, "Well, you're purportedly a
state agency, but you're only in Austin.
Speaker:What can you do for the rest of the
state?" So we really took that to heart,
Speaker:like I said, about 10,
Speaker:15 years ago and started
talking to publishers at that
time to see if they would
Speaker:let us make our resources available
electronically and remotely.
Speaker:This was really new at the
time. It was pretty novel.
Speaker:I don't know of any other law
libraries that were doing that.
Speaker:These days it's pretty common. I think
COVID really pushed people towards that,
Speaker:but we had it already set up.
Speaker:And so there's really a wealth of
resources there that even if you have a
Speaker:library in your office or a county law
library or university law library that
Speaker:you go to,
Speaker:you might see different things
online through our resources that
Speaker:might compliment or supplement
what you have available to you now.
Speaker:One of the best things that I really
like to sing the praises of is our
Speaker:library of legal periodicals,
so law journals, law reviews,
Speaker:and then we also have a portion for bar
journals that is available through a
Speaker:website called Hein Online.
Speaker:We used to get the law journals in print
and law reviews and they take up a lot
Speaker:of shelf space. They're very
expensive. As pointed out,
Speaker:they're only accessible
here in Austin. So Hein is,
Speaker:I think they're like a family run
company and they are preservation and
Speaker:digitization minded and
they're completist. So what
they do is they take the
Speaker:actual print copies of
all these law reviews,
Speaker:scan them exactly as they appear in paper
so it's adequate for citation and make
Speaker:it available through this database.
Speaker:They will not post something
to my knowledge unless
they have the complete run.
Speaker:So you can be sure that
the very first issue going
Speaker:up to the very most current issue
that they can have access to based on
Speaker:embargoes and things will
be available through that.
Speaker:So if you are looking for an
obscure law review article,
Speaker:a really old one, those are oftentimes
available through Hein Online.
Speaker:It's something like 9,000 titles or 9,000.
Speaker:It's just a incredible just
comprehensive legal periodical
Speaker:resource.
Speaker:So how do you access ...
Speaker:I'm familiar with Hein and I remember
I think you could have a direct
Speaker:subscription to Hein at one
point, maybe you still can't.
Speaker:How do you access that
through the state law library?
Speaker:For all of our online resources, you just
need to sign up for a library account.
Speaker:And if you go to our website, which is
Speaker:www.sl.texas.gov, one of the
first links that you'll see,
Speaker:we've got a quick links box that has kind
of the most popular things that people
Speaker:want. There's a button that says,
Speaker:"Get a library account." And one thing
that I will point out is that when we
Speaker:were first starting this program,
Speaker:one of the agreements that our vendors
asked us to make to them was that we
Speaker:would put some sort of constraints on
the user base just so every attorney in
Speaker:the world all of a sudden wasn't
having free access to this.
Speaker:So they asked us to limit it
just to people who are in Texas.
Speaker:And the way that we determine
that is if you come in in person,
Speaker:we look for an ID or a piece of mail,
Speaker:but online we use a geolocation feature.
So unfortunately we do run into this
Speaker:where an attorney's licensed
in Texas, reside elsewhere,
Speaker:practices in Texas. We can't give
an account in that situation.
Speaker:If you are in Texas, you sign up for
a library account with that one login,
Speaker:you have access to everything on our
website, including Hine online, eBooks.
Speaker:We have a lot of specialty
databases as well.
Speaker:We have a really popular
immigration law database,
Speaker:but the two big ones are eBooks and
Hine online. We also offer fast case,
Speaker:but you have access to that
through membership in the bar.
Speaker:So that's not as I think exciting as the
ebooks really are one of the main draws
Speaker:for, I think, practicing attorneys.
Speaker:Gosh,
Speaker:I can think of so many uses for that and
things that I would probably go and try
Speaker:to get my hands on. Doing it
myself would take a lot of effort.
Speaker:We lawyers sometimes forget that ... And
I'm here in Austin. I have no excuse.
Speaker:I mean, Jody's in Fort Worth, so he
at least has the excuse of, "Well,
Speaker:you're in Austin, what can
you do for me? " But gosh,
Speaker:just knowing that that's available online,
Speaker:it's as easy as signing up for a library
account that you just opened up a whole
Speaker:new world of possibilities
for me and my research.
Speaker:And I think even more to the point
about ease of acces and efficiency,
Speaker:we have a whole staff of librarians who
are waiting for your emails and your
Speaker:calls if you are to say, "I
need this law review article.
Speaker:I need this citation. I
need something on this.
Speaker:I need this old CLE article." We're
happy to pull that and send it to you.
Speaker:Even beyond being able to
access and research yourself,
Speaker:know that that's significant tool and
resource that we make available are our
Speaker:researchers here.
Speaker:How much help can attorneys
get from the researchers?
Speaker:So we won't do case law research,
Speaker:but we are happy to either
recommend resources.
Speaker:If you're sort of indicating to us that
you are wanting to look into a topic in
Speaker:depth, we can suggest some starting
points for you. And to that end,
Speaker:we have put together a guide
containing our recommended theories,
Speaker:ebook, and books. So if you're
coming to us and saying,
Speaker:"Where are your intellectual property
materials?" We can point you to that and
Speaker:it's going to have a lot
of great starting point.
Speaker:So it might be excellent overviews,
Speaker:it might be sort of the most
renowned titles on a topic,
Speaker:but we'll get you started with that.
Otherwise, you can come to us and say,
Speaker:"I'm looking for information
about how to accomplish X, Y,
Speaker:Z." We'll check the resources that we're
familiar with that we know may address
Speaker:that and say,
Speaker:"Here's a chapter from this
resource discussing what
you're looking for. " If we
Speaker:can't find something that really kind
of seems to hit on exactly what you're
Speaker:looking for, what we might do is
send you a table of content and say,
Speaker:"Here's a resource that we
think may be helpful for you.
Speaker:If you want to identify some of these
sections that look like of most interest,
Speaker:we're happy to send those along." But
typically sort of help identifying
Speaker:resources, maybe help
determining a search strategy.
Speaker:If you're working in Lexus or Westlaw
from home and aren't getting the results
Speaker:you want and want to see if we can
suggest maybe how to refine it further,
Speaker:we're happy to do that.
Speaker:Always happy to pull citations for you
because we have access either through our
Speaker:specific collection or professional
networks where we can put out fielders to
Speaker:see if someone else,
Speaker:a neighboring library perhaps has
something that you're looking for.
Speaker:In terms of the search parameters,
Speaker:are y'all using the full AI capable
features in Lexus and Westlaw?
Speaker:So they will not allow us to make
that available for our patron use yet
Speaker:because we do also offer free Westlaw
and Lexus access on our public
Speaker:computers. So that's another perk.
If you're in the Austin area,
Speaker:sign up for a library account,
Speaker:you're welcome to come use our
Westlaw and Lexus for free.
Speaker:They won't give us that yet.
Speaker:And then in our professional
subscriptions for the librarians,
Speaker:we have not chosen to integrate
that yet typically because we're
Speaker:not doing the kind of advanced searching
on a patron's behalf that really would
Speaker:make that most useful.
Speaker:Both systems are starting
to integrate types of AI
Speaker:into the searching a little bit.
Speaker:There's some extractive AI that allows
you to do a little bit more natural
Speaker:language searching, which
comes in our subscriptions,
Speaker:but the things that they're really
selling like the briefwriter,
Speaker:don't write briefs here so we don't have
any use for that. I think that there's
Speaker:a document comparison feature in Lexus,
Speaker:which is really interesting
that we do have access to,
Speaker:but I think the really powerful AI
tools are really more geared towards
Speaker:practicing attorneys and stuff that
we don't do on behalf of Patreon.
Speaker:What are the types of things that you
see the heaviest use in your library?
Speaker:Definitely our ebooks and even I
really wish we could make these
Speaker:available remotely,
Speaker:but the vendors just haven't
really opened that door for us yet,
Speaker:but the O'Connor's books.
All of the O'Connors,
Speaker:they're so popular for a very good reason.
Speaker:We have copies that can be checked out.
Like I said, you can use the scanners.
Speaker:The copies that can be checked out often
never come back and people love them
Speaker:and rightfully so. They're super
easy to use. They're very accessible.
Speaker:I would love it.
Speaker:I think it would make so many people's
day across the state if we could make
Speaker:that available remotely,
Speaker:but we do have them available
electronically through
Westlaw in the library.
Speaker:So there's that.
Speaker:But then also our historical statutes
are another thing that when people learn
Speaker:about them,
Speaker:they get a lot of heavy use because
that's a question we get a lot almost on a
Speaker:daily basis is what did X
statute read as of X date?
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:that's something I specifically wanted
to ask you about and make sure you talked
Speaker:about because I have been down
that road, JV has too no doubt,
Speaker:but there's a lot of us that go
down that road and as we all know,
Speaker:our legislature is very
active and statutes get
amended and you buy the latest
Speaker:O'Connor's version of CPRC or whichever
and it doesn't have that old text in
Speaker:it anymore.
Speaker:And sometimes you need to know because
the law has changed over and the old law
Speaker:applies to your case.
Speaker:I was going to compliment you and the
state library on that historical Texas
Speaker:statutes service because I happened
to find that on my own about a year
Speaker:ago and it made it so easy to
find the old statutory text.
Speaker:And I did also discover that I think
it goes back to there's like a date
Speaker:cutoff in there somewhere. I think my
notes say if it was amended after January
Speaker:one of 2004,
Speaker:then there's another service
that's available too that
would overlap with that.
Speaker:But between the statutes by date site,
Speaker:which is one of the ones I found in the
historical Texas statutes collection,
Speaker:which you all have available,
it was amazing. I mean,
Speaker:you can go back basically as far as you
want it to go in terms of legislative
Speaker:history on a stat,
Speaker:not legislative history like
floor debates or things like that,
Speaker:but the actual statutory language, those
changes are not lost to history at all.
Speaker:They're very findable and that's
an extremely useful resource.
Speaker:Yeah. I think that there's only between,
like you said, what's on our website.
Speaker:So probably about 15 years
ago we have this great print
Speaker:collection that I think we've established
is perhaps the only complete on
Speaker:the old versions of all the old laws.
Speaker:And we approached the publisher at
the time to see if they would give us
Speaker:permission to digitize
them and post them online.
Speaker:And because they're unannotated,
Speaker:they agreed because there's no material
in there that they hold a copyright to.
Speaker:So they gave us the permission.
Speaker:We were fortunate to receive a few grants
from like the Texas Bar Foundation and
Speaker:I believe the Austin Bar Foundation to
have them professionally digitized and
Speaker:then post them on the website.
Speaker:So going from 1879 to 1984 is what's on
Speaker:our website.
Speaker:Statutes by date picks up at 2004 and
then if you have access to Westlaw Lexus
Speaker:between them,
Speaker:I think that there's only about two years
where there's not some sort of form of
Speaker:them online.
And to be honest,
Speaker:I haven't looked at the range that
Westlaw and Lexus cover recently.
Speaker:They've been kind of working backwards.
Speaker:So it's very possible that
we're all caught up to date,
Speaker:but because we realized that people
really need to do that research and
Speaker:sometimes they actually need to
come and dig around in the books.
Speaker:We made some changes to how our collection
is displayed and presented to the
Speaker:public this past year.
Speaker:We used to have all of the old
superseded base volumes in the basement
Speaker:and the public couldn't get down there
and we bound the pocket parts and they
Speaker:were in another place and the
session laws were in another place.
Speaker:And so you kind of had to run around our
library and call the librarian to pull
Speaker:the base volume up for you.
Speaker:So last year we finally put everything
together in one place so that the
Speaker:public can come in and have access
to all the parts that they need if
Speaker:they wish to do that research on their
own. So now that's on the second floor of
Speaker:our library on the mezzanine,
Speaker:you'll find I believe the annotated
tute based volumes go back to: Speaker:or 1920. We started saving all of
the pocket parts starting in: Speaker:bind them every year
and have them available.
Speaker:So you can get together with the
session laws, you can get really,
Speaker:really granular and pin
it down to a certain date.
Speaker:Some of your listeners may not
have ever used a pocket part.
Speaker:That's true. I was going to go
there. That was my question is like,
Speaker:does anybody even know what
a pocket part is anymore?
Speaker:It's really funny because when I do
tours and I show people here are the
Speaker:statutes and print and I show that here
are the pocket parts and here is the
Speaker:literal pocket in the book that they
go to. You can see they're like,
Speaker:"Oh." But whenever we have
new librarians start here,
Speaker:I train everybody in print
first because not only
Speaker:do we have some of these old resources
that you have to know the mechanics of
Speaker:them,
Speaker:but I also think it's really critical to
understanding how the databases are put
Speaker:together if you understand
where they came from.
Speaker:They're replications of these print
resources and understanding how the print
Speaker:resource works and is compiled I think
really helps you understand what the
Speaker:database is doing and it's not just
putting words in and then they magically
Speaker:appear. So all of our librarians,
Speaker:we start in print and then move to the
databases later just so that we know
Speaker:we're actually understanding the theory
behind why these books are assembled the
Speaker:way that they are.
Speaker:I'm still chuckling about pocket parts.
Speaker:I remember learning about it in law
school and the first time I saw an actual
Speaker:pocket, I realized, oh, okay, now
I get what they're talking about.
Speaker:It makes sense.
Speaker:Yeah. It's also really funny,
Speaker:your listeners have also maybe
never done loose leaf updates.
Speaker:You've got a binder with loose leaf
pages that are put in there and then to
Speaker:update them, you got a
list of take this page,
Speaker:pull it out and put in the new
one. And librarians, of course,
Speaker:have a love for books. And so
whenever I train them and I say,
Speaker:"You rip this page out and you throw it
away," sometimes they're like, "Really?
Speaker:That's what we do. "
That's how that works.
Speaker:That's how Dorsanios was when I started
practicing. What are some ways that,
Speaker:and this is near and dear to Todd's
heart, but solo and small firm lawyers,
Speaker:what are some ways that you guys can
kind of help level the playing field and
Speaker:maximize for them?
Speaker:Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker:Definitely all of these extremely
expensive resources that
Speaker:we make available. So Lexus
and Westlaw in the library,
Speaker:but even beyond that are
collection of ebooks.
Speaker:There are a lot of really,
Speaker:really powerful practice treatises
and practice guides in there.
Speaker:Dorseno's, for example,
the litigation guide,
Speaker:that is actually one title that is kind
of reserved for government employees
Speaker:only. That was another thing
that our vendors wanted,
Speaker:that this was their sort of crown jewel
that they wanted to protect a little
Speaker:bit. That said,
Speaker:there are many other publications
that kind of reprint the chapters of
Speaker:Dorsenios that you can check out.
Speaker:So a subscription to Dorsenios
every year is super expensive and a
Speaker:solo is probably not going to be able
to put those resources towards it.
Speaker:Like I said, we're happy to send sections.
Speaker:You can find a lot of that in
different sort of sectioned out
Speaker:ebooks that we offer. So always feel
like you can ask a librarian and say,
Speaker:"I'm looking for this
information from Dorsenios.
Speaker:We can either potentially send you
the task from it or we can say,
Speaker:if you want to read more,
Speaker:this is replicated in Dorsey's
pretrial or appellate." But yeah,
Speaker:I think that that is one of the
things that all of these expensive,
Speaker:high value detailed
sources we have here that
Speaker:can give you the tools to put you on
that same level as someone who's at a
Speaker:big firm with librarians who are
pulling that information for them.
Speaker:We have just anything you could
think of. We have jury charges,
Speaker:we have pattern depositions,
we have legal encyclopedias,
Speaker:we have federal practice and procedure,
Speaker:just in everything in
between CLEs online from: Speaker:forward, so you don't even need to ask us,
Speaker:but then in print going back to the '80s.
So these are all things that a small
Speaker:firm or solo shouldn't have to spend
money on because we are already spending
Speaker:that money for you.
Speaker:To that point,
Speaker:I was thinking sometimes I'm a Westlaw
subscriber and I've got a lot of stuff
Speaker:included within my subscription,
Speaker:but sometimes there's something out of
plan that I think might be really useful
Speaker:to look at, but I don't know that I
really want to push the button and say,
Speaker:accept the charge. And
you're making me think, Amy,
Speaker:maybe the next time that happens,
Speaker:I'll have to look and see if that resource
is available through the state law
Speaker:library.
Speaker:A lot of that stuff,
Speaker:whether it's Wright Miller or Moore's
or something that's through Lexus,
Speaker:but we have that in print.
Speaker:So even if it's outside of
your electronic subscription,
Speaker:our print collection does a really
good job of supplementing that.
Speaker:I know a lot of people want to believe
that everything is available online and a
Speaker:lot is,
Speaker:but we still make sure that we're
maintaining a print collection for sort of
Speaker:those reasons, either accessibility
or licensing restrictions,
Speaker:it allows us to make it
available in another form.
Speaker:What are some ways that
lawyers can improve their
research efficiency using you
Speaker:guys that maybe they don't
think about or even know about?
Speaker:This is one of my favorite topics is
that even if you are an experienced
Speaker:researcher,
Speaker:you may not be using some of the
really cool features of some of
Speaker:these databases to their fullest extent.
Speaker:So here's where I will want
to share my screen We're.
Speaker:Going to commit a podcast SIN and
do a visual discussion on here,
Speaker:but we're going to take clips of this
and post them on our socials and maybe if
Speaker:there's a way to make it available on
YouTube or something, we can do that too.
Speaker:Oh, it'll be visible on YouTube.
If Amy shares her screen,
Speaker:we will make sure that it
is fully visible on YouTube.
Speaker:So this is an ebook that is part of what
we call our digital collection or our
Speaker:ebooks and it's available through
a platform called Overdrive,
Speaker:which you may be familiar with
through your public library,
Speaker:university libraries, offer it,
Speaker:but it's just an ebook platform that has
a lot of built-in features that I don't
Speaker:think that people are maximizing. This
is an ebook that I have checked out.
Speaker:So what I'm going to do is go into the
text by clicking the read button here
Speaker:and it looks just like a normal book.
Speaker:And one thing that you will see here
is that I just checked this book out
Speaker:today,
Speaker:but it already has highlighting in it
and that is left over from the last time
Speaker:that I checked it out and made note.
Speaker:What I kind of want to stress is that
even when you return an ebook from us,
Speaker:even if you forgot about it and
it gets automatically returned,
Speaker:your research is not lost.
It stays there and it's not just
Speaker:highlighting.
Speaker:There are several different ways
to really kind of maximize how you
Speaker:are making your notes and
organizing your research.
Speaker:So the first is if you click on this
highlighter little guy up at the top,
Speaker:you will see that there's like a dozen
different colors and this is run through
Speaker:LexisNexis and their reps
always say that's one of the
feedback that they get is
Speaker:that more colors, more colors.
So there are a lot of colors.
Speaker:It can be really useful because if you're
working on several different things at
Speaker:once,
Speaker:you can highlight in different colors
depending on what applies to what and it
Speaker:lets you organize then based on highlight
color. So when you highlight text,
Speaker:I just highlighted a section in
peach. My other highlights are in red.
Speaker:If you click on the highlights,
Speaker:you can note that I have made notes
to myself and I can go in and say,
Speaker:"I want to come back to this for the
brief that I'm writing." And I can make a
Speaker:note about why I highlighted that. I
think that I'm sure everyone else has been
Speaker:with me that you flag a page for yourself
or you highlight something and then
Speaker:you come back and you're like,
Speaker:"Why did I think this is important?" I
just clicked on my annotation that was
Speaker:highlighted in peach and
so I can make another note.
Speaker:So the note for myself is like,
Speaker:"I want to refer to this for this reason
and I'll click done." So then at the
Speaker:top you'll see this little speech bubble
looking thing and this is a listing of
Speaker:all of the annotations that I
have made ever in this book.
Speaker:You can see some are in yellow.
Speaker:It tells me the date that
I made that annotation.
Speaker:It gives me the note that
I left for myself then.
Speaker:It gives me a little sort of indication
as to where in the book it might be. And
Speaker:I can also search and say,
Speaker:"Was I right looking for
anything on mandamus?" No. Okay.
Speaker:Where are my habeas notes?
Speaker:So you can search by keyword there
within your notes. Say in theory,
Speaker:I wanted to use red for one client,
peach for another. That's great. Okay,
Speaker:that's all highlighted. Then once
I, let's say I close the book,
Speaker:let's say I return it, I click
X so I'm out of the read view.
Speaker:Looking at the main screen
in the digital collection,
Speaker:you will see at the left hand side
some few options and one of them is my
Speaker:annotation. If we go here,
Speaker:this gives me a list of all of the
annotations I've ever made in any
Speaker:book and I can go in and view them even
when I don't have the book checked out.
Speaker:That's what I want to stress the most
is that I don't think people know that
Speaker:this is there because this still leaves
all of your research sort of in one
Speaker:central place. So operating on that
assumption that I'm color coding my
Speaker:highlights per client.
I've got a yellow one here.
Speaker:I'm going to click that now and say,
let's add this to my export queue,
Speaker:which I will show you in a moment.
In the book that I was just in,
Speaker:I also had some highlights in yellow and
then you'll see at the left hand side
Speaker:just under my annotations,
you'll see my export queue.
Speaker:So here are all the things that I've
said that I want to take out of here and
Speaker:put into a document to compile.
So I only want the yellow ones,
Speaker:so I'm going to click the checkboxes
next to all the yellow highlights.
Speaker:Then I'm going to go back
up and under actions,
Speaker:I have all these options how to compile
this information and export it for
Speaker:use. So if you want ... It a spreadsheet
so that you can filter, sort,
Speaker:things like that.
You can do that.
Speaker:You can also export it just a PDF so
that you can email it to somebody.
Speaker:And here, again, keeping in mind,
Speaker:I don't have all of these
books checked out right now.
Speaker:It's got the text from the
resource that I wanted to note.
Speaker:It's got my notes saying why
it was important and it's
got the citation so that
Speaker:you can specifically
go back and look at it.
Speaker:This release is also
indicating the currency.
Speaker:So if in fact this is a really
old annotation that I'd made,
Speaker:it tells me the version of the book
that it came from in the event that it's
Speaker:been updated.
Speaker:That's another thing that's worth
noting is that the digital library
Speaker:does have past releases. So
if you have a site that is,
Speaker:especially for one of these
loose lease where, like I said,
Speaker:we literally rip out the pages,
Speaker:but you need to look back at something
that's maybe a couple years old. We can
Speaker:see previous releases.
Speaker:So let's go to this title and
I'll show you just real quick.
Speaker:Can you bookmark different
publications there?
Speaker:You can, you can. I believe
we can go to this and say-.
Speaker:So you bookmark your favorites?
Speaker:The way that I will do it is I
will add tags and I might say,
Speaker:and so once I add a tag working on a
project and I say these books are all kind
Speaker:of what I want, I can go look
at my tags and say, okay,
Speaker:for the CLE that I gave in
January that I was working on,
Speaker:these are the books that ID'd for
myself. I also believe that in my books,
Speaker:this will show you what you've downloaded
in the past, what you've checked out,
Speaker:what you currently have
out under borrowed.
Speaker:So this might also be a way to say that
these are the books that I've relied on
Speaker:in the past and I want to come back to.
Speaker:This is the main landing page just
for this volume of this series.
Speaker:So multi-volume set,
Speaker:you can check out individual volumes at
a time rather than the whole thing. So
Speaker:here in this sort of main menu,
you will se prior releases.
Speaker:So you can go back fairly far
to see historical changes and
Speaker:versions as of a certain point in time.
So I think that's really interesting.
Speaker:Real quickly, another, before I go on,
Speaker:any questions about the sort of research
tools within the Lexus Digital Library
Speaker:or other things about this?
Speaker:I just want to spread the gospel of
knowing that you can save these notes.
Speaker:This is fantastic. We're
just letting you go for it.
Speaker:It's like Kindle right there on your
computer with all your highlights and
Speaker:stuff.
Speaker:It really is.
Speaker:And just knowing that you have the
ability to then sort of repackage
Speaker:the notes that you made for yourself and
put them in a package that makes sense
Speaker:is so much nicer than being like,
"Okay, great. There's this book.
Speaker:I can go back and refer to it,
Speaker:but then how do I make sense of what
I want to se out of there?" So I think
Speaker:that's great.
Speaker:I mentioned Hein Online earlier
and I do want to point out one very
Speaker:interesting feature in it that I think
also maybe doesn't necessarily make your
Speaker:research more efficient.
It does in some ways,
Speaker:but I think it makes it way more
powerful is a feature in Hinonline that's
Speaker:called Scholar Check. And this is very
similar to shepardizing for case law.
Speaker:So it will allow you to see what other
articles have cited to your article that
Speaker:you're interested in or how many articles
have cited to it that might indicate
Speaker:that it's something that you really
want to take a look at because it's
Speaker:considered to be important,
groundbreaking, noteworthy. Okay.
Speaker:So I'm looking at Hine online and within
our subscription are a lot of sort of
Speaker:sub subscriptions.
Speaker:I mentioned our law reviews
and law journals because
that's kind of the meat of
Speaker:what we, and the main
reason that we subscribed.
Speaker:But there are a lot of other things in
here that you might find interesting.
Speaker:A lot of federal
congressional and presidential
Speaker:documents, Supreme Court
documents, things like that,
Speaker:a lot of primary federal documents.
Speaker:But really our law journal library is
kind of what people are interested in.
Speaker:In the search bar for Hein Online,
it makes it very easy for you to ...
Speaker:I don't have a citation on hand,
Speaker:so I'll just probably search
for something for an author,
Speaker:but it makes it very easy for you
to search and target your search.
Speaker:So I'm in the search bar and
let's see if we can find some
Speaker:articles from Chief Justice Hecht.
So when I fill that in,
Speaker:it has some suggestions depending on
what it thinks you might be looking for.
Speaker:So we can search for
his name under author.
Speaker:Title would be the title of the article,
citation. If I had a citation here,
Speaker:I could pop it in and it would
pull that article right up for me.
Speaker:And then the catalog,
Speaker:I believe these are the names
of the law reviews and journals.
Speaker:So rather than the individual
article, the name of the whole work.
Speaker:So we're going to search
for him as author.
Speaker:It precreates this advanced search
for us. And what we will see,
Speaker:I'm going to find a good one,
but on the right hand side here,
Speaker:you'll see the scholar
check. For an article,
Speaker:he wrote a forward that looks
like for another article in St.
Speaker:Mary's Law Journal and ScholarCheck is
telling us that this is cited by nine
Speaker:other articles.
So this then, when we go to scholar check,
Speaker:it is going to list all of the articles
that cited to our initial article.
Speaker:So it expands our network of research.
Speaker:It allows us to continue that line of
thought and trace it through history,
Speaker:see how it had an impact on other
scholarship or other jurisprudence.
Speaker:It can be really
interesting. And like I said,
Speaker:if an article is cited many times,
Speaker:that may be a signal to you that this
is something especially significant that
Speaker:you want to take a look at.
Speaker:It does allow you to up at
the top there's a sort by.
Speaker:It allows you to sort by number of times
that this article is cited by other
Speaker:articles. It allows you perhaps
to select the most cited author
Speaker:indicating perhaps that this
particular author is a notable figure,
Speaker:significant jurist, things like that.
Speaker:You might want to see the newest article.
It allows you to sort by that too.
Speaker:So depending on your research goals,
Speaker:it can organize this for you in a way
that allows you to take that next step.
Speaker:I think ScholarCheck is super cool.
Speaker:I love that they have taken that sort of
shepardizing concept and transferred it
Speaker:here because it really makes it much
easier to find this line of thought
Speaker:and then trace it and see sort
of the impacts that it's made.
Speaker:It could be the legal equivalent
of searching up yourself on Google.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Wonder who cited my comment.
Speaker:You absolutely can. You can search by
author and then see of my articles,
Speaker:who's citing to it, things like that.
It's really, really interesting.
Speaker:You talk mostly about law journals
and that sort of thing in Hines.
Speaker:So it's really mostly I think about
legal scholarship as opposed to say
Speaker:somewhere along the way you mentioned
like the Texas Bar Journal and some other
Speaker:publications or legal news,
not legal newspapers per se,
Speaker:but how far does it go? I mean, is it
like Texas lawyer or something like that?
Speaker:I don't think it has Texas
lawyer. So I think it's pretty ...
Speaker:I'm not sure how they sort
of draw their parameters,
Speaker:but the bar journals would be national.
So all bar journals across the country,
Speaker:because you can go into each database and
Speaker:there is an explanatory guide for it.
Speaker:If you're in Hein and you're not
sure perhaps what this encompasses or
Speaker:how to best use it, you will note
... So here looking at Hein online,
Speaker:you'll see this sort of research the
breadcrumbs across the top showing that
Speaker:we're in databases, we're currently
looking in the Law Journal library.
Speaker:There's both this little
eye giving you a very,
Speaker:very broad overview of
what's contained in it.
Speaker:So here this is of the journals,
Speaker:there's almost 3,500 different titles,
Speaker:92,000 volumes and 50 million pages,
Speaker:but this lib guide is here.
Speaker:This is written by the
people at Hein that go into
Speaker:much more detail about what is in here.
So it might show you
Speaker:specifically what's in there. It might
give you information on updates to it,
Speaker:recent editions.
Speaker:It's a very nice sort of snapshot about
what you might be able to find within
Speaker:it. Well.
Speaker:That's a great resource.
Speaker:Yeah, it absolutely is.
Speaker:Yeah. Hynes great.
Speaker:I love sort of singing their
praises because not only
are they excellent at what
Speaker:they do, the organization, the
user friendliness is just great,
Speaker:but they're just like the
nicest people. Like I said,
Speaker:it's like family owned company
and they go to great pains to
Speaker:be responsive and helpful for us services.
Speaker:So I love giving them the attention
and the credit that they're due.
Speaker:I guess what are the things that you
think are underutilized that you wish more
Speaker:people knew about and
would use at the library?
Speaker:I would say definitely, although
this is starting to come around,
Speaker:all of the dictionaries that we have,
Speaker:I think I briefly mentioned earlier
that we had a big collection of
Speaker:dictionaries,
Speaker:but we didn't really have a sort of
systematic way to show people exactly
Speaker:which ones we have and what time
periods they might be covering.
Speaker:That's another thing that we get
questions about on a, if not daily,
Speaker:weekly basis is that I
need a contemporaneous
definition of this term for
Speaker:this sort of year. And we've
got a lot. Like I said,
Speaker:we went through the list that's
in one of the appendices of
Speaker:Reading Law by Scalian Garner
and took all the lists of the
Speaker:general language dictionaries
and the legal dictionaries.
Speaker:We have Blacks going back to the first
edition and specifically pointed out
Speaker:where one might find them within the
context of our collection. So whether we
Speaker:have them in print, there are some that
are available more widely on the web.
Speaker:We link to those.
Speaker:So knowing that people can access that
through us I think is really helpful.
Speaker:What else is underutilized that
I wish people knew more about?
Speaker:Hyen is one of the ones that I think
for library nerds like ourselves,
Speaker:whenever I tell people that it's there,
Speaker:eyes light up and just knowing the sheer
scope of what's within it is really
Speaker:impressive.
Speaker:The thing that I think I wish people
would utilize the most are our librarians.
Speaker:We are always up for a
challenge. We're always up for,
Speaker:we like weird questions,
but also most importantly,
Speaker:especially for newer practitioners,
no question is a dumb question.
Speaker:We are happy to help you get started.
Speaker:We are happy to help
explain things to you.
Speaker:We know that it's confusing.
We know that it can be hard.
Speaker:We are here to not judge and just to
help and make you look like magic.
Speaker:I really,
Speaker:really do want to encourage that listeners
should please feel free to reach out
Speaker:to us.
Speaker:We accept questions by phone
8:00 to 4:45 I think is when our
Speaker:phone cut off Monday through Friday.
Speaker:We accept questions online through
our website, which again is
Speaker:www.sl.texas.gov. And currently
in the upper right-hand corner,
Speaker:you will see a box I think that
says questions, ask us, please do.
Speaker:So you can submit a question through
the web there and we are in the
Speaker:process of rolling out text messaging.
Speaker:Ooh, look out.
Speaker:Yeah. So we are waiting to
get our text messaging number,
Speaker:but then you will be free
to text us day or night.
Speaker:We will text you back because we know a
lot of people access our website from a
Speaker:mobile device.
Speaker:So we're wanting to make sure that we
can reduce as much friction as possible
Speaker:between people having a question
and getting that question to us.
Speaker:The wheels are turning. I hope that
by the end of May that will be live,
Speaker:but keep checking that questions page
because we will put that text messaging
Speaker:number up there as soon
as it's ready to go.
Speaker:I mean, I know it probably
varies depending on the question,
Speaker:but just turnaround times on
average, like if someone calls,
Speaker:how quickly can they
expect an answer or not?
Speaker:Just because attorneys love to wait
till the last minute to do things.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Our goal is to respond to somebody
within one business day and we are pretty
Speaker:good about doing that.
Speaker:The only exceptions are maybe if there's
maybe some back and forth and we need
Speaker:clarification or things like that,
Speaker:but you should expect to hear back
from us within a business day.
Speaker:Don't wait until the last minute
and we're closed on weekends.
Speaker:Okay. So don't wait until the last minute
to call the library and start early.
Speaker:We can't help you with a
pressing research question at 20
Speaker:AM on a Sunday, but we will
get back to you on Monday.
Speaker:Are y'all seeing an uptick in
the number of pro se litigants
Speaker:coming to you for research help?
Speaker:I don't necessarily think that
there has been an uptick in
Speaker:that. It has been steady.
Speaker:What we have seen has been some changes in
Speaker:our usage statistics.
Speaker:Our websites may be getting less hit
interestingly and we think that's because
Speaker:of AI because Google's AI
overview is taking our content and
Speaker:presenting it in that AI overview.
Speaker:Our phone calls have gone down
a little bit and we see that
Speaker:as potentially being because of AI maybe,
Speaker:but also I think these days people are
less comfortable with picking up the
Speaker:phone and making a phone call.
Speaker:So that's one reason we're introducing
text is to maybe get some of the younger
Speaker:people who are growing up, didn't
really grow up making phone calls,
Speaker:but as they're becoming adults
are running into legal questions.
Speaker:So we want to be able to make sure that
we're able to communicate them with them
Speaker:in a way that they prefer and feel
comfortable with. Because if you're a
Speaker:non-lawyer and you're having
to reach out to a law library,
Speaker:something's probably going not
great for you in your life.
Speaker:And so you're stressed out,
Speaker:you're upset and the last thing you want
to do is have to get even more outside
Speaker:of your comfort zone.
Speaker:So we are cognizant of that and
trying to make it as easy for people.
Speaker:But just in the terms, the sheer
number of pro se litigants,
Speaker:I don't necessarily think that's the case.
Speaker:We have seen a deadly demand for a long
time, no signs at the meeting. Yeah.
Speaker:That makes sense. I just,
Speaker:I think we're seeing sort
of a proliferation of
self-represented litigants using
Speaker:AI. I don't want to suggest that
they should all be calling you, but-.
Speaker:They truly should.
Speaker:We recognize that AI can be a powerful
tool and the horse has left the barn.
Speaker:We're not going to roll that
back. So now the question is,
Speaker:how can we help people use it responsibly?
Speaker:How can we help them
verify their citations?
Speaker:How can we help them find supporting
material that either confirms or
Speaker:disproves what AI told them?
It's a great starting point.
Speaker:There's a lot of additional, it's
not the end point. So I mean, please,
Speaker:I never discourage anybody from
calling us. I want to say use us more,
Speaker:call us more, because we're
always happy to help with that.
Speaker:And in that AI has so much promise
for self-represented litigants,
Speaker:but it also has so much
potential for problem.
Speaker:And if we can help them forestall those
problems, we absolutely want to do that.
Speaker:It will be for the benefit of
everybody, for them, for the judge,
Speaker:for the opposing party,
Speaker:just everybody wins out if we're
not cluttering the courts with AI.
Speaker:Hallucinations. As a
practical thought on that,
Speaker:if there's a self-represented
litigant who says,
Speaker:"I want to file a motion for
summary judgment in a TCPA
Speaker:case." There's resources that
would be available through you all
Speaker:that would go far beyond
what they can find,
Speaker:things that are copyrighted
and shouldn't be available,
Speaker:at least through a general AI search.
You could steer them towards ...
Speaker:We talked about Dorsenio earlier
as a resource. It's like, "Okay,
Speaker:I'll take my tongue out of my cheek now
and agree with you that I would hope
Speaker:that pro se litigants would contact State
Law Library for help because I think
Speaker:it could help moderate some of
the sort of off-topic filings,
Speaker:shall we call them,
Speaker:that get put into court files because
people just don't know and they can't
Speaker:afford a lawyer. And so they take
what ChatGPT generates for them,
Speaker:slap it in a Word document and file it.
If they even had a basic form to go off
Speaker:of that, I think would tremendously
potentially improve their product.
Speaker:And as you say, Amy,
Speaker:save everybody time and trouble because
we're not having them to respond to
Speaker:things that really aren't relevant.
Speaker:AI is being sold to everybody.
It's this magic solution,
Speaker:this silver bullet that'll fix everything
for them and it's not quite that. So
Speaker:I'm part of a working group with some
other law librarians across the country to
Speaker:develop a best practices guide for
self-represented litigants using AI.
Speaker:If you're going to do it and people
will, how can you do it well?
Speaker:How can you do it effectively?
How can you do it responsibly?
Speaker:So we're all seeing this and
we're all kind of trying to say,
Speaker:how can we manage this? What
can we do to support it?
Speaker:It can be so useful for a lot of things.
Speaker:It can be so bad and dangerous
for a lot of other things.
Speaker:I do have just one side
question that I'm curious about.
Speaker:What is the most interesting or random
request you've ever gotten for research?
Speaker:I love these questions. We actually have
a full moon calendar in our break room,
Speaker:like an astrology person,
Speaker:but I would swear that things get a
little weirder when there's a full moon.
Speaker:There was a weird stretch one
year where we had a cluster of
Speaker:interference with a corpse
questions coming up at once.
Speaker:Just all of a sudden it was like we had
several people who this was on their
Speaker:mind sort of at the same time.
Speaker:Just to put this out there real
quick, when people call you,
Speaker:it's not privileged and if you've got
confidential client information and you
Speaker:share it with them, you may
violate your ethical rules.
Speaker:So just be clear on that.
Speaker:Now this is interference like a tort.
Speaker:We're not talking about how to dispose
of a body. We're talking about how to ...
Speaker:I thought you were talking
about a tort claim.
Speaker:No, corpse. Yeah.
Speaker:That their loved ones body
had gone to one funeral home,
Speaker:but then another relative said that they
had the rights over it and so they took
Speaker:it. I mean, there was all sorts of ...
Speaker:It was like a very strange multiple
questions about that at once.
Speaker:I think it was two or three years ago.
Speaker:One of the most fun things that we've
done was the local Austin NPR station has
Speaker:a series called ATXplained where listeners
can submit a question and then the
Speaker:reporters will report on it.
Speaker:And a seventh grade class submitted a
question about what are the weirdest
Speaker:laws in Texas? Much credit to
the reporter, they came to us.
Speaker:And so we pretty much had all
of the librarians getting to
Speaker:be like,
Speaker:"What's the weirdest question you've
ever gotten?" And we got to put them all
Speaker:together. And my favorite one,
Speaker:my favorite sort of little factoid
from that was not a law per se,
Speaker:but an administrative rule is that the
Secretary of State in I think determining
Speaker:voting where you can vote specifically
included a section stating
Speaker:that if astronauts are
in orbit on election day,
Speaker:they can vote from space knowing that
Houston has a space industry. I thought
Speaker:that was super cool,
Speaker:but one of the funnier questions that
we used to get a lot actually was some
Speaker:sort of variation of, am I married
because of common law marriage.
Speaker:People would not know the
sort of three-pronged test and
Speaker:they would have someone saying like, "Oh,
Speaker:my ex- girlfriend is saying
that we were actually married,
Speaker:am I married?" So that was kind of
a fun, very, very common question.
Speaker:Well, I mean,
Speaker:that segues right into the tip or war
story that I'm now going to ask you for.
Speaker:This is great.
Speaker:And now we've added the element of
video such that we're encouraging
Speaker:folks to check out the episode on
YouTube to see exactly what you took us
Speaker:through, which was great. But
do you have as a parting though,
Speaker:do you have a tip or a war story to wrap
us up on for the listeners and viewers?
Speaker:I may need to think a little
bit more on the war story.
Speaker:A tip is great. I mean, something
we haven't talked about.
Speaker:I am always kind of up for, like
I said, we're up for a challenge,
Speaker:so we don't ever really see things
as trials we were put through.
Speaker:But as far as tips, I would
say if you're in Austin,
Speaker:come stop by and walk around and
see if there's things that jump
Speaker:out at you and see how you
can use our conference room,
Speaker:see how you can use our
scanners. Like I said,
Speaker:we have all of this great stuff in
print, Dorsenyo's, Wrenton Miller,
Speaker:all the sort of Matthew Bender,
Texas practice material.
Speaker:Come take stock and see if there's stuff
that you can bookmark in your mind for
Speaker:later that you can call on us to send to
you. All the Black's law dictionaries,
Speaker:the Prince's legal abbreviations thing.
Speaker:We've got a lot of stuff that just kind
of take it in and it might kind of get
Speaker:the wheels turning for you later about
how we can be abuse to you. I recognize
Speaker:that a lot of your listeners
probably aren't in Texas,
Speaker:so do the same thing on our website. Go
click around, go poke around and see,
Speaker:visit our recommended books page.
Speaker:You might be surprised what we have
that we can make available to you.
Speaker:So just kind of do a
quick tour. Like I said,
Speaker:it might kind of inspire things or at
least plant a seed in your mind for later.
Speaker:Well, Amy,
Speaker:you've really helped us out by explaining
just what it is that you all do.
Speaker:So many of us know, hey, the state law
library is there. We've actually visited,
Speaker:but it's such a great reminder,
Speaker:especially hearing it from you as
the executive director. You're there,
Speaker:what you do and even you've educated us
a lot about things that wouldn't even
Speaker:even thought of that you do. So thank
you so much for your time today.
Speaker:We really appreciate it.
Speaker:Oh yeah. Thank you so much for
having me. I love talking shop.
Speaker:I think it's really fun and interesting.
And like I said, come try to stump us.
Speaker:We're up for it.
Speaker:Yeah, that's right. Podcast field trip.
Speaker:Oh, challenge accepted. Well,
thanks again for being with us, Amy.
Speaker:Thanks for listening to the
Texas Appellate Law Podcast.
Speaker:If you enjoyed this episode,
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Speaker:legal advice.