After you run your search, you can take advantage of the filters on the left side of the page.
Keep special mind to the Date, Section Type, and Location.
Often the easiest way to search is a full text search. In Hein, full text search uses a software known as Fastcase. Searching within collection or by citation can be more efficient, but work better once the researcher has greater familiarity with legal research.
Tip
If you want to search within law review articles or legal code, use the magnifying glass button.
Once you have identified search terms try putting them in quotes. This will greatly improve the specificity of your searches because it will exclude items that do not include the exact search terms you are looking for. What would the individual terms "United" "States" "of" "America" pull up instead of "United States of America"?
Generic words often introduce a lot of clutter into your search. Exact search terms can eliminate the extraneous results. This can greatly improve searching for specific people and places that may have a more generic word within the whole term (such as "Donald Trump" or "Salisbury University)"
When viewing a case you can see how often it's been cited in an article or in other cases.
By clicking the link for article citations the subsequent results page you can sort the results by several ways (relevance, volume date - oldest first, volume date - newest first, document title, number of times cited by articles, number of times accessed in the past 12 months, number of times cited by cases, and the most cited author).
You can also resort the results on the Cases Cited Results Page (relevance, decision date - oldest first, decision date - newest first, number of times cited by articles, number of times cited by cases, and document title). Searching by date can be helpful if you're looking for newer cases that cite the case you're researching.