August 13, 2009 | Daily Report Online
Perdue to announce pick for new justiceGov. Sonny Perdue will announce his pick for the Supreme Court of Georgia today at 11:30 a.m. Perdue is filling a slot on the high court created by the retirement of former Chief Justice Leah Ward Sears. Perdue will announce his decision at the State Capitol.On June 30, the Judicial Nominating Commission gave Perdue its short list of nine candidates: Atlanta solo practitioner James P.
By Andy Peters
1 minute read
May 05, 2006 | Daily Report Online
Baker's opponent is worth $1.56 millionThurbert E. Baker is facing a millionaire in his attempt to win a third full term as Georgia attorney general.Republican challenger Perry J. McGuire reported to the State Ethics Commission this week that his net worth is $1,560,128, with assets of $2,503,000 against liabilities of $942,872. McGuire's wealth is concentrated in real estate holdings in Douglas County.
By Andy Peters
2 minute read
April 16, 2009 | Daily Report Online
McKenna bills $631K for Lehman caseThe Lehman Brothers bankruptcy case has been a gold mine for McKenna Long Aldridge.The law firm last week asked the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York to approve its bill for $631,156. McKenna also asked approval for $35,620 in expenses. The bill covers the period from Sept. 15 to Jan.
By Andy Peters
2 minute read
October 29, 2010 | Daily Report Online
Olens leads AG pollRepublican Sam Olens leads Democrat Ken Hodges by 6.6 percentage points in the race for Georgia attorney general, according to a Landmark Communications poll of 1,686 active voters conducted on Tuesday. But Olens and Hodges could be forced into a runoff, since the poll showed Libertarian Don Smart garnering enough support to keep Olens from getting more than 50 percent of the vote.
By Andy Peters
2 minute read
February 24, 2009 | Daily Report Online
Morris Manning cuts costs, sees profit riseEven though revenue dropped in 2008, Morris, Manning Martin partners were able to enjoy an uptick in take-home profit.Robert E. Saudek, the managing partner, said cost-cutting allowed partner profits to rise."We reduced expenses significantly, and we did it early," Saudek said.Gross revenue fell 4.07 percent to $99.
By Andy Peters
1 minute read
December 07, 2007 | Daily Report Online
Bar, Chamber watch Perdue on judicial raisesA PROPOSAL to raise salaries for Georgia's judges is receiving a bipartisan push, but what appeared to derail the idea earlier this year-the lack of support from Gov. Sonny Perdue-remains a potential obstacle.The State Bar of Georgia and the Georgia Chamber of Commerce announced this week they back a 20 percent across-the-board salary increase for jurists on the superior courts, the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court.
By Andy Peters
6 minute read
November 05, 2007 | Daily Report Online
Reservoirs may not be answer to water woesGov. Sonny Perdue may have reached a water-sharing agreement with the governors of Alabama and Florida last Thursday, but the pact doesn't provide a solution to Georgia's long-term water woes. The best way to prevent the kind of drought that is currently threatening Georgia, according to Perdue and other Republican state leaders, is to build more reservoirs to store water.
By Andy Peters
8 minute read
September 16, 2010 | Daily Report Online
Libertarian would focus on cost cuttingSavannah lawyer Don Smart acknowledges that, as a Libertarian, it's only "possible, not probable" that he will be the next attorney general of Georgia. But he maintains his candidacy is worthwhile.Smart said he hopes to add to the campaign conversation his emphasis on reviewing the Law Department's costs and cutting wasteful spending.
By Andy Peters
7 minute read
August 13, 2010 | Daily Report Online
State Bar readies for legal tax fightBy Andy Peters
5 minute read
January 04, 2006 | Daily Report Online
AG's Outside Lawyers Earn Low Rates, But Cost Adds UpAndy [email protected]:An important point was omitted from a Jan. 4 story about Georgia's special assistant attorneys general that listed the 10 individual SAAGs who were paid the most money from the state in the last fiscal year.A Law Department spokesman said that while one SAAG was paid for each case, the work was often done by the SAAG and other attorneys working with him.
By Andy Peters
5 minute read
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