By Andrew Maloney | June 8, 2022
Jamie Walter was the founding partner of Kirkland's Washington, D.C., investments group. Nabil Sabki spent nearly a decade in Latham's Chicago office. Now they've both swapped firms.
By Cedra Mayfield | June 8, 2022
"We collectively felt like having this option to request virtual appearance moving forward would provide attorneys and citizens with flexibility that takes into account some of the life realities we all face," said Georgia Court of Appeals Chief Judge Brian Rickman. "We will maintain the hybrid option so that one attorney's request to appear virtually will not impact the choice of opposing counsel, who may prefer to appear in person."
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Laura A. Stutz | June 8, 2022
As employers reopen their physical workspaces they should anticipate challenges to their reopening plans as well as to the workplace arrangements adopted during the pandemic. The top areas for COVID-19-related employment litigation include disability and accommodation claims, wage-and-hour disputes, and workplace safety complaints.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | June 7, 2022
The judge has ordered supplemental briefing regarding a defense motion to dismiss under the Speedy Trial Act he decided in 2020, after a Ninth Circuit opinion and remand rejected his earlier order.
New York Law Journal | Conversation
By Brian Lee | June 7, 2022
Sherry Levin Wallach said inconsistencies among the judiciary led to a feeling of unease, and increased lawyers' stress levels.
By Andrew Maloney | June 7, 2022
With marketing spending surging and clients increasingly willing to move work around, there's a growing prospect that Big Law might see its ability to deepen ties by referring work across practices begin to wane.
By Katheryn Hayes Tucker | June 7, 2022
Lead defense attorney was Eugene Stearns of South Florida, who remembers the trial as a "superspreader" that ended with many of his team members getting COVID-19.
By Avalon Zoppo | June 7, 2022
Republican-appointed chief judges issued mask mandates 43.1 percent of the time and Democratic-appointed chief judges did so 52.0 percent of the time between March 2020 and July 2021, the study found.
By Cheryl Miller | June 7, 2022
The chief justice is experiencing "mild symptoms" and will not participate in Tuesday's remote oral arguments, the court said.
By Katheryn Hayes Tucker | June 6, 2022
Circuit Judge Britt Grant's opinion underscored the dire record of business owners seeking coverage for losses attributed to COVID-19. She said policies weren't written with foresight of a once-in-a-century pandemic.
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