Credit: Pinterest

(Miami, Florida) June 22, 2021

Laws Reporting is pleased to announce their latest resource on how court reporters use their shorthand machine (or the stenograph), the machine that is essential to producing an accurate transcript. While the shorthand machine looks like a small laptop, it certainly doesn’t operate like one. On this page, readers can learn about how shorthand machines are laid out and how court reporters use these machines to record what was said during a legal proceeding.

Credit: Naegeli Deposition and Trial

Court reporting is a crucial part of any legal proceeding. Court reporters produce accurate transcripts of any deposition or trial, translate it from shorthand into “real English,” and deliver it back to the attorney for reviewal. Having this resource is absolutely game-changing for attorneys, so having a court reporter one can rely on time and time again is something attorneys cherish.

Laws Reporting has been that resource for reliable Miami court reporters for decades. The firm was founded when creator Paula Laws realized how many court reporters couldn’t live up to the needs of attorneys. She vowed to provide that much-needed service. After 45 years of business, Laws Reporting has grown into the full-service litigation support firm South Florida attorneys turn to.

“There have been many times where my law firm needed a court reporter, often the night before a big hearing,” one client says. “We would reach out to multiple reporters and would find Laws Reporting as the company that would always pull through. Now our firm ONLY uses Laws Reporting for our court reporting needs due to their professionalism, diligence, and ability to cater to our needs often at the 11th hour! We are very happy and fortunate to have found Laws Reporting!”

For more information on Laws Reporting, call (954) 581-4010 or email [email protected].

7805 S.W. 6th Court Suite 51, Plantation, FL 33324