Carole A. Levitt, Esq.

Internet For Lawyers, Pres.

Carole A. Levitt is the founder and President of Internet For Lawyers (www.netorlawyers.com) and Vice-President of CLEwebinars.com. Since 1999, she has been a nationally recognized CLE seminar speaker and author about Internet investigate and legal research; social media research; social media
ethics; Google search: and Google Cloud Apps.

She co-authored two editions of Internet Legal Research
on a Budget published by the American Bar Association’s Law Practice Division (ABA LPD) in 2015 and 2020. Carole has also co-authored six other ABA LPD books, including: two editions of The Lawyers Guide to Fact Finding on the Internet (2004 and 2006); Find Info like a Pro, Volume 1 (2010) and Volume 2 2011); Google for Lawyers: Essential Search Tips and Productivity Tools (2010); and Google Gmail and Calendar in One Hour for Lawyers (2013). She has also co-authored fourteen editions of IFL Press’s The Cybersleuth’s Guide to the Internet (1999–2019) and hundreds of Internet research articles.

Previously, Carole was a California attorney, a law librarian in Chicago and Los Angeles, and a Legal Research and Writing Professor at Pepperdine University School of Law. She graduated with distinction from UIC John Marshall Law School where she was a member of the school’s law review and worked full-time as a law
librarian

  • Internet for Lawyers and CLEwebinars.com

    Carole Levitt and Mark Rosch will take you on a deep dive into the Internet to quickly conduct factual and investigate research to obtain useful background and investigate information about parties, witnesses, experts, jurors, and clients (current and potential), and more. You’ll be able to unearth a treasure trove of information for pre-trial preparation and to use at trial as evidence or for cross-examination by earning to:
    • Use Google’s Advanced Search menu and some of its specialty databases to create more sophisticated and targeted searches to:
    o find an expert’s articles and PowerPoint presentations
    o find images
    o locate news (both current and historical)
    • Track down deleted or altered web pages to use as evidence.
    • Successfully navigate through Social Networking sites to:
    o find information in a party or witness’s profile to attack their credibility during cross-examination
    o uncover fraud
    o find the smoking gun
    o decide which jurors to challenge
    • Find public records using free sites and pay sites to:
    o locate missing defendants and witnesses
    o uncover criminal histories, property records, driver’s license, vehicle records, driving records, assets, vital records, and political campaign contributions, etc.