The Case you are brieng is Jensen v. Sheriff, White Pine County, 89 Nev. 123 (19733), and you can locate it by Googling either the case name or the citation. A number of good cites for accessing the case will be available, for instance, Justia.com., casemine.com, and Oyez.org. Do not just read a commentary on the case, you need to have the actual case opinion to read. Accessing it online will not usually give you the Headnotes the way a Reporter or Westlaw version would, but you can get the full text of the actual case. Guidelines: a. The FACT section should not be more than LG of the whole. Utilize and summarize the key facts, including a brief procedural history of how this case wound its way through the lower Courts and what were the decisions there. b. The ISSUE section should only be 1 sentence in the form of a question and containing the 3 components discussed above. c. The RULE section can be bullet points listing cases and statutes (remember the Rules and Steps for evaluating the importance of authority discussed in the rst lecture) with an explanatory phrase regarding what it is about. If it is a case, include the citation material. l[Duly list the main cases that the Court used and discussed in its analysis. You do not need to list every single case that is in a string cite, that the Court simply mentioned in passing or to which it referred. If the Court did not discuss it, do not include it. d. The ANALYSIS section should be your longest sectionapproximately 2i3 of the whole. This is usually the hardest section to write because you are reporting on how the Court applied statutes and cases to the facts of the case. It is explaining the Court's reasoning not merely listing guotes from the cases. You are showing how the Court matched law to the facts to reach their decision