Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Mark Dubois | March 11, 2024
The majority of disciplinary matters involve failure to manage IOLTA accounts or noncompliance with requests for documentation related to overdrafts or audits.
By Robert G. Brody | Mark J. Taglia | March 7, 2024
While the appeal is pending, we expect to see an influx of other petitions filed by other student-athletes to have their teams unionized.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Connecticut Law Tribune Editorial Board | March 7, 2024
Simply put, there is no good argument for a contract clause that entitles a prevailing plaintiff to their fees but not a prevailing defendant to theirs.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Krishnan Nair | March 7, 2024
Vanessa Ford: Law's mental health crisis is only likely to worsen—but when blame lies with everyone, the buck stops at no-one.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Thomas Moukawsher | March 4, 2024
Twenty years ago, the rise in edgy billboards and new types of electronic advertising led the Connecticut Judicial Branch to create a Committee on Lawyer Advertising. The Committee's 41-page report is still on the branch site.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Mark Dubois | February 29, 2024
The phenomenon of a shrinking pool of young or new lawyers has some consequences. Ask any hiring partner how hard it is to find young folks to replace retiring members.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Connecticut Law Tribune Editorial Board | February 28, 2024
Our test should make sense to both liberals and conservatives no matter who is running the executive branch, even if they are unhappy about the result in a specific case.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Joette Katz | February 28, 2024
A terse dismissal from the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals may allow Cantu to be executed later today.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Joette Katz | February 26, 2024
A ruling that stands in the way of reproductive autonomy could lead to the end of in vitro fertilization.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Bennett L. Gershman | February 23, 2024
Former President Donald Trump will soon be tried in Manhattan for using campaign funds to pay for a woman's silence over an extramarital affair. It might turn out to be "the most followed criminal trial in American history," Law Journal columnist Bennett Gershman writes.
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