It can't possibly be a cost-cutting thing because it must cost more to
rewrite the opinion than to scan them as they are. Early on (late 80s
early 90s) the process was to have two people key the text into the
computer and the computer would flag inconsistencies. With scanning
available there's no need for that effort and expense, and far less of a
chance for error.

And it sure isn't an attempt to save on the cost of paper and
printing.

These aren't errors. These are rewrites.

Perhaps they hired Law Review editors who just can't let go of the
"I've got to change something" mentality as things cross the desk?

Perhaps it is part of a vast middle-wing conspiracy. <G>




Jim Maule
Professor of Law, Villanova University School of Law
Villanova PA 19085
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://vls.law.vill.edu/prof/maule
President, TaxJEM Inc (computer assisted tax law instruction)
(www.taxjem.com)
Publisher, JEMBook Publishing Co. (www.jembook.com)
Owner/Developer, TaxCruncherPro (www.taxcruncherpro.com)
Maule Family Archivist & Genealogist (www.maulefamily.com)




>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 06/11/03 11:53PM >>>
It struck me that the messages attached below, forwarded by our
library
director, about "editing" of Supreme Court opinions by West, have
considerable relevance for those of us whose craft of constitutional
law
requires us to have recourse so often to Supreme Court opinions.  I
have
noticed similar things in studying numerous old cases for my 14th
amendment
articles and forthcoming book. What I have seen is mainly that the
West
versions of 19th century cases include a lot of typos and mistakes, and
do
indeed omit some of the front material mentioned in the below
messages.
Also, the Westlaw on-line versions of all cases, up to the present
day,
erase italics, which is a real problem when you want to quote
verbatim,
especially for a writer like me who likes to use insertion of emphasis
(always identified as my own or not) as a stylistic tool.

I recently came to the frustrated conclusion that I will have to
photocopy
by hand the original official US Reports versions of more than 50 key
cases
that are important sources for my current book.

I am disturbed to hear that even more extensive modifications appear
as
described in the below message. This certainly strengthens my
unwillingness
to rely on West, or especially on Westlaw!

Bryan Wildenthal

Thomas Jefferson School of Law



-----Original Message-----

From: Roger Jacobs [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sent: Wednesday, June 11, 2003 12:45 PM

To:  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Have any of you received reports about the issue noted by Mark Lambert

which came to me from a colleague monitoring another list?

I find this Bowdlerization without notice disturbing and feel it should
not

go unnoticed by law librarianship.

Roger



>>From: "Mark Lambert"  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

>>Has anyone else encounted the "editing" done by West of early
Supreme

>>Court Reports as noted below?

>>

>>Any related experiences, examples, comments?

>>

>>Thank you.

>>Mark

>>

>>Mark Lambert

>>Special Collections and Government Documents Librarian

>>Fred Parks Law Library

>>South Texas College of Law

>>Houston, TX

>>

>>From: Thomas H. Martin

>>

>>Matter: Does Westlaw corrupt the texts?

>>

>>Has anybody else had the experience of comparing a Westlaw-reported
case

>>to the printed account of the case, and finding significant
variations?

>>

>>I have told you about the 1804 Supreme Court case on maritime
salvage,

>>Mason v. Ship Blaireau, 2 Cranch (6 U.S.) 240, that I use in my

>>Restitution class. Last night I was reading this case in the Westlaw

>>version. I suddenly realized that some language that I remembered
from

>>Cranch's report was missing. I then compared the texts more
carefully.

>>

>>Westlaw modernizes and summarizes Cranch's report, to no good effect
that

>>I can see. Compare:

>>

>>

>>Cranch: The ship Le Blaireau, James Anquetil, master, on a voyage
from

>>Martinique to Bordeaux, laden with sugar, on the 30th of March, 1803,
at

>>10 o'clock at night, in Lat. 35.46 N.-- Long 46. west from Paris, was
run

>>down by a Spanish 64 gun ship, called the St. Julien, commanded by

>>Francisco Mondragora, which struck the bow of the Blaireau, carried
away

>>her bowsprit, and cutwater close to the seam of the stem, started
three

>>planks of the bends, and all above them, and crushed to pieces the

>>larboard cat-head. Before morning there were three and a half feet
of

>>water in the hold. . . .

>>

>>

>>Westlaw: The French merchant ship, The Blaireau, laden with sugar
and

>>coffee, and bound from Martinique to Bordeaux, on the night of the
30th

>>of March, was run down by the Spanish sixty-four gun ship, called the
St.

>>Julien, in latitude 35 degrees 46' north 46 degrees west from

>>Paris. The Blaireau was greatly injured by the rencounter [sic.,

>>"rencounter" in original], and before morning there were three feet
of

>>water in her hold.

>>

>>Westlaw has reduced important points to summaries and has entirely

>>omitted the arguments of counsel which are so important and

>>characteristic a feature of early Supreme Court reports. The overall

>>effect is to put a Reader's Digest version of Cranch's report before
the

>>Westlaw user with no warning that the Westlaw text is not authentic.

>>

>>I find this startling indeed.

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