By Karen Sloan | April 24, 2020
The state will offer a Massachusetts-only online bar exam in September if it's unsafe to deliver the traditional test—a first among jurisdictions.
By Jane Wester | April 23, 2020
The total number of inmates tested remained at 19 as of Thursday, with 11 testing positive. The number of staff members with COVID-19 was 59, according to the report, an increase of seven cases from Tuesday.
By Jason Grant | April 23, 2020
The bar association points to Trump's use of emergency power and says that during the last century Congress has given the U.S. president increasing authority, via more than 100 statutes, to order action when there is a national emergency not involving military conflict.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Samantha Stokes | Patrick Smith | April 23, 2020
Even though most are deemed "essential services," law firms are in no rush to reflood their offices with lawyers and staff.
By C. Ryan Barber | April 23, 2020
New filings made under the Foreign Agents Registration Act at the U.S. Justice Department offer a glimpse at some of the advocacy the firm has conducted for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia amid the coronavirus outbreak.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | April 23, 2020
The Connecticut Bar Examining Committee is expected to propose changes to the Connecticut Practice Book to allow law school students in the state to work with a supervising attorney and to allow for limited court exposure before taking the bar examination.
By Amanda Bronstad | April 23, 2020
Efforts to coordinate business-interruption lawsuits against insurance firms focus on 16 cases so far filed in federal courts against eight insurance firms, but Richard Golomb, of Golomb & Honik, predicts an "avalanche of cases."
By Karen Sloan | April 23, 2020
The University of California system, the University of Arizona, Harvard University and the University of Michigan are projecting massive budget shortfalls, and law schools are feeling the impact.
By Varsha Patel | April 23, 2020
The GC has called for other company senior management to consider making the same move.
By Angela Morris | April 23, 2020
"Suspending statutes that govern judges' decisions in particular cases does not amount to a personal, legally cognizable injury against the judges," the Texas Supreme Court ruled Thursday in In Re Abbott.
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