National Law Journal | Commentary
By John G. Levi, Kenneth C. Frazier and Harriet Miers | May 4, 2018
The opioid crisis and the recent spate of natural disasters present new challenges to already overburdened civil legal aid providers.
By Jim Saunders | May 4, 2018
The ruling by a panel of the First District Court of Appeal in a 2018 Alachua County robbery case came after two other state appellate courts came to different conclusions about forcing defendants to supply passcodes to unlock cellphones.
By Jenna Greene | May 4, 2018
On leave from her new job as an associate at Stradley Ronon Stevens & Young, Kristen Gibbons Feden turned the tables on Bill Cosby and his high-profile defense team.
By Tom McParland | May 3, 2018
A federal jury on Thursday found four former Wilmington Trust executives guilty of orchestrating a scheme to hide hundreds of millions of dollars in bad loans from regulators and investors.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | May 3, 2018
Arrested for domestic assault, attorney Dwight Merriam has agreed to take a leave of absence from the mega law firm of Robinson & Cole. Many believe he will not have a hard time returning to law.
By Andrew Denney | May 3, 2018
Sergey Aleynikov's loss at the Court of Appeals is the latest development in a legal odyssey that began in 2009, when the computer engineer left Goldman Sachs to work for a startup that offered to triple Aleynikov's salary at Goldman to $1.2 million.
By Katheryn Tucker | May 3, 2018
The Spalding County Sheriff's Office asked the GBI Tuesday to investigate the death of Griffin Municipal Court Judge William G. Johnston, 53.The Georgia Bureau of Investigation conducted an autopsy Thursday on the judge who was found dead in his car, and preliminary results suggest death by suicide, a spokesman said Thursday.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Michael Marciano | May 2, 2018
Alisa Tiwari, a participant in Yale's San Francisco Affirmative Litigation Project, said she first became interested in taking court action after reading last December that the U.S. Department of Justice, under Attorney General Jeff Sessions' direction, had repealed guidance calling for more compassionate and less stringent treatment of poor, young and disabled Americans, as well as people of color.
By Michael Marciano | May 2, 2018
Alisa Tiwari, a participant in Yale's San Francisco Affirmative Litigation Project, is part of a team challenging the Department of Justice's repeal of guidance calling for less stringent treatment of poor, young and disabled Americans, as well as people of color.
By Jonathan Ringel | May 2, 2018
The Daily Report has identified 20 lawyers for its annual "On the Rise" list of attorneys under the age of 40 who are expected to go far in the field.Along…
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