Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Rick Ellsley | December 22, 2020
As we all know, courts throughout Florida have halted in-person jury trials for almost all of 2020 due to COVID-19. Unfortunately, despite the prospect of a vaccine being widely distributed and available in the coming months, it remains unlikely that there will be in-person civil jury trials in 2021 and maybe through 2022.
By Dan Roe | December 15, 2020
Three young attorneys and a law student have founded a group to trade information and help attorneys under 35 break into the region's highly competitive international arbitration practice.
By Catherine Wilson | December 7, 2020
The late Miami litigator Andrew Hall was intent on forcing the Sudanese government to pay for the USS Cole bombing. Three months after he died, a settlement option opened for the first time.
By Catherine Wilson | December 7, 2020
A three-year legal battle went to arbitration, and Boies Schiller's defense of contract language carried the day.
Daily Business Review | Profile
By Raychel Lean | November 30, 2020
John Arrastia has spent his career working toward the watershed moment when "being diverse isn't something that you need to talk about."
Daily Business Review | Analysis
By Dan Roe | November 9, 2020
Here's a look at law firm leaders' practice areas plans and expectations heading into next year.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Jeffrey Gilbert | November 5, 2020
Prior to the pandemic, all of us knew the rule of court-ordered mediations. The lawyers and their clients were required to attend mediations in person. Whenever and wherever those mediations were scheduled. Wherever the parties were located.
By Raychel Lean | October 30, 2020
"There's usually something else, whether it's a political motivation or it's a diplomatic reason, and if you look carefully at the real reason why extradition is going on, sometimes you can find a defense that fits within the defenses that can be raised," defense counsel said.
By Raychel Lean | October 23, 2020
"In terms of overall policy, arbitration and other alternative dispute resolution options are becoming increasingly attractive to all parties because of the high expense of litigation, and this decision further advances that," defense counsel said.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Joseph P. Farina and John W. Thornton Jr. | October 22, 2020
Any business dispute that could result in litigation can interrupt or end normal business transactions and relationships, and can divert the allocation of corporate resources to activities that do not move the business forward, which would adversely impact the company's bottom line.
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