By Mason Lawlor | December 15, 2023
Parents had a "sufficiently personal stake" in the litigation to establish a standing to intervene in a records request.
By Michael A. Mora | December 15, 2023
Of these attorneys, only two will ultimately earn a seat on the circuit court bench.
By Amanda Bronstad | December 15, 2023
OptumRx, a pharmacy benefit manager facing trials over its role in the opioid crisis, has moved to disqualify Motley Rice, citing alleged ethical violations tied to confidential information the law firm received through government subpoenas.
By Amanda Bronstad | December 15, 2023
OptumRx, a pharmacy benefit manager facing trials over its role in the opioid crisis, has moved to disqualify Motley Rice, citing alleged ethical violations tied to confidential information the law firm received through government subpoenas.
By Alex Anteau | December 15, 2023
Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp announced he would prioritize tort-reform measures in an address to the Georgia Chamber of Commerce in August, falling in line with the chamber's policy objectives, which currently include repealing the direct-action statute and premises liability.
By Christine Charnosky | December 15, 2023
This year, we've expanded our "Go-To Law Schools" project, which ranks the top Big Law feeder schools, to include data on additional employment outcomes, ranking the top 50 law schools that sent the highest percentage of graduates to government and public interest jobs, as well as to judicial clerkships.
By Colleen Murphy | December 14, 2023
The New Jersey Supreme Court found that "a governmental entity cannot be estopped from refusing to take an action that it was never authorized to take under the law—even if it had mistakenly agreed to that action."
By Colleen Murphy | December 14, 2023
"I think what employers would really like from the Legislature is more certainty. Not making laws that, to figure out what it means, you have to go to litigation," David A. Rapuano, a partner with Archer & Greiner, said. "To me, and to my clients, it is bad policy to create laws that cannot be figured out unless a court [is involved]."
By Avalon Zoppo | December 14, 2023
In the lawsuit, Erma Wilson alleges that Midland County violated her due process rights by employing Ralph Petty as a prosecutor at the same time that, unbeknownst to her, he worked as a law clerk for the county judge who handled Wilson's drug-possession case.
By Alex Anteau | December 14, 2023
"I think premises liability issues are going to be really big going forward," former chief justice Harold Melton said.
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