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    Wisconsin Lawyer
    August 01, 1999

    Wisconsin Lawyer August 1999: Book Reviews 2

     

    Wisconsin Lawyer August 1999

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    Vol. 72, No. 8, August 1999

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    Book Reviews


    This Month's Featured Selections


    I Love the Internet I Love the Internet But I Want My Privacy, Too:
    Simple Steps Anyone Can Take to Enjoy
    the Net Without Worry

    By Chris Peterson
    (Rocklin, CA: Prima Publishing, 1998).
    226 pgs. Retail $13.56.

    Reviewed by JoAnn M. Hornak

    Seven months ago, I purchased my first computer and started regularly surfing the net. As a prosecutor, I frequently see the hazards of criminals obtaining personal and financial information about law-abiding citizens and cases of identity theft. I was interested in learning how I could protect myself on the Internet. I Love the Internet provides an excellent overview of the potential dangers you and your family face when visiting Web sites, sending email, and entering chat rooms. Complex technology is explained with easy-to-understand analogies to the physical world. The book also provides an extensive list of groups and resources monitoring Internet privacy issues.

    The special section on protecting children gives practical, common-sense steps every parent should take to safeguard their children not only from pornographers and pedophiles but from a much more insidious and wide-spread danger - advertising. Companies take full advantage of the unregulated Internet by using seemingly innocent devices such as interactive games that are cleverly disguised to provide a technique for marketing products and gathering information about your children.

    I Love the Internet makes it clear that you expose personal information every time you log on to the Internet, at home and at work. Fortunately, there are concrete steps we can take to protect our privacy such as purchasing blocking software and using anonymizers and encryption, but many risks still exist.

    The claim made in the title that the Internet can be used "without worry" is a bit of a misnomer. The government, direct marketers, and private database services will continue to collect and sell personal information about us and we will continue to be bombarded with electronic junk mail despite taking precautions. The author correctly points out that industry self-regulation and possibly federal regulation is needed to truly safeguard our privacy on the Internet.

    JoAnn M. Hornak, U.W. 1987, is a Milwaukee County assistant district attorney.

    Third Party and Self-Created Trusts:
    Planning for the Elderly and the Disabled Client
    (Second Edition)

    By Clifton B. Kruse Jr.
    (Chicago, IL: ABA Real Property,
    Probate & Trust Law Section, 1998).
    271 pgs. $89.95.
    To order, call (800) 285-2221.

    Reviewed by Thomas G. Reynolds

    This book is an excellent resource for attorneys who serve disabled and elderly people in their practices. While of obvious interest to estate planners and elder law attorneys, it will prove equally beneficial as an introduction to this area for general practitioners.

    The author begins with a discussion of self-settled trusts. These are trusts in which the trust creator retains a beneficial interest. Kruse reviews the limited circum-stances under which such trusts may be created without disqualifying the creator from receiving Medicaid assistance. In addition, he reviews the various self-settled trusts used in the past that are no longer viable Medicaid planning techniques.

    He then discusses trusts created by third parties. This section is of particular interest to general practitioners who occasionally have clients who would like to provide for an elderly or disabled friend or relative without jeopardizing their access to Medicaid benefits. Kruse includes sample trust illustrations for creating these supplemental needs trusts. The forms alone make the book worth owning.

    Third Party and Self-Created Trusts is very well documented throughout. It provides ample illustrations, charts, sample language, and voluminous notes. My sole improvement would have been to place the sample trust language on disk for ease of use.

    Of special interest to Wisconsin practitioners is Kruse's discussion of Wisconsin Statutes section 701.06(5m). This section provides statutory support for creating supplemental needs trusts for the disabled that do not disqualify them from receiving public support.

    I highly recommend Third Party and Self-Created Trusts to any attorney who works in or anticipates working in this area. Given the demographic information in the book's introduction, this material will become even more important as the population of the United States ages.

    Thomas G. Reynolds, Michigan 1988, is vice president and trust manager of AMCORE Bank N.A., South Central, in Madison.

    Legal 100 The Legal 100: A Ranking of the Individuals
    Who Have Most Influenced the Law

    By Darien A. McWhirter
    (Secaucus, NJ: Citadel Press, 1998).
    396 pgs. Retail $27.50.

    Reviewed by Kim Fenske

    Lawyers contribute to the development and protection of individual freedom, safety, and opportunity in our society. The Legal 100 provides scholarly highlights of lawyers who deserve historical recognition for sacrificing personal comfort to attack poverty, prejudice, and injustice in modern Western democracies.

    McWhirter provides brief legal biographies arising from ancient times, beginning with Babylonian ruler Hammurabi and including Aristotle, Cicero, and Justinian. The author summarizes the contributions of England and France through the works of King Henry II, Francis Bacon, and John Locke. From the American Revolution, McWhirter discusses the ideas of lawyers Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, and Alexander Hamilton.


    McWhirter touches contemporary protection of privacy rights by considering the decision of Justice William O. Douglas in Griswold v. Connecticut, concerning the distribution of birth control information. He also addresses the contributions of Earl Warren, promoting racial equality in Brown v. Board of Education, applying the exclusionary rule to states in Mapp v. Ohio, and preventing forced confessions in Miranda v. Arizona. Including the Thurgood Marshall dissent in San Antonio School District v. Rodriguez and the swing-vote of Sandra Day O'Connor in Mississippi Women's University v. Hogan, McWhirter addresses the subtlety and power of lawyers influencing social change.

    In the vein of The Black 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential African-Americans Past and Present, by Columbus Salley, the latest Citadel roster earns its place on a scholarly library shelf. However, McWhirter's work suffers the weakness of its companion book by providing only a skeletal reconstruction of each reformer, three pages in length, rather than a more intensive tool to understanding great social movements.

    Kim Fenske, U.W. 1990, is a social reformer who litigated for several years, campaigned for the state assembly, and now teaches government and social problems in Wisconsin.


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