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[Court Reporter]


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 Court Reporters - Court reporters capture speeches, conversations, legal proceedings, meetings, and other events when written accounts of spoken words are necessary for correspondence, records, or legal proof.  Court reporters can  provide closed-captioning and real-time translating services to the deaf and hard-of-hearing community.   The National Court Reporters Association has all the information you need to get you started on this exciting career path. 

Court Reporter

 Paralegal and Legal Assistants -  Paralegals—also called legal assistants—are continuing to assume a growing range of tasks in the Nation’s legal offices and perform many of the same tasks as attorneys.  Paralegals will be in demand in the years ahead. They can do much of what attorneys  do -- and they cost less.  More information can be found at The National Association of Legal Assistants and also The National Federation of Paralegal Associations. 

Process Servers - A legal process server delivers (or serves) legal documents like, writs, summons, subpoenas, complaints and other court documents to a defendant or an individual involved in a court case.  The process server must serve the documents in accordance with the legislation in the area of service, which may mean handing the documents to the defendant personally or sub-serving to someone in the same household or business.  Process serving is an important aspect of the Due Process of Law.  More information can be found at  The United States Process Servers Association.