By ALM Staff | May 5, 2022
During the earlier months of the pandemic, then-Mayor Bill de Blasio issued an executive order directing the city's Department of Transportation (DOT)…
By Mason Lawlor | May 4, 2022
"Deprivation of income (both in the form of wages and of benefits) is a quintessential pocketbook injury, which money damages can remedy," the appeals court said.
By Colleen Murphy | May 4, 2022
The owner of a Liberty Tax Service location banned the use of masks by customers and employees at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, despite a statewide mask mandate, and ultimately was hit with more than $100,000 in fines. Now, Massachusetts' highest state court has dismissed the business owner's challenge to the mask mandate as moot.
By ALM Staff | May 4, 2022
This suit was surfaced on Law.com Radar. Read the document here.
By Andrew Maloney | May 4, 2022
The need to scale up to compete is driving more mergers among smaller and midsize firms. "It's getting to that point where you become a safe choice for the client, particularly if they're moving work from a larger firm," said consultant Lisa Smith.
By Law.com Contributing Editors | May 4, 2022
The architecture industry, like the legal industry, relies heavily on an apprenticeship model of training and was forced during the pandemic to learn on the fly about how that experience could be approximated in a virtual setting.
By Colleen Murphy | May 3, 2022
Answering a certified question from a federal judge, the Maryland Court of Appeals has ruled that its former chief justice had the authority to temporarily toll the statue of limitation on civil matters during the pandemic.
By Andrew Maloney | May 2, 2022
The firm continues its expansion in the Northeast after planting roots in five other locales over the last three years, including New York and Boston.
By Mason Lawlor | May 2, 2022
A large majority of courts nationwide have sided with insurers in the recent string of pandemic-driven business interruption cases. Nevertheless, a federal judge has asked the Maryland Court of Appeals to weigh in on whether the COVID-19 virus causes "physical loss or damage" to a property such that it triggers coverage.
By Avalon Zoppo | May 2, 2022
The man argued his rights to counsel and allocution were violated when he was muted twice during a remote sentencing hearing.
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Duane Morris LLP (a 900 lawyer firm with 20 plus offices across the country, and in London and Singapore) seeks an experienced commercial fi...
NOTICE OF FEDERAL MAGISTRATE JUDGE VACANCIES IN ATLANTA AND ROME, GAThe U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia is acceptin...