Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | November 8, 2018
A Superior Court judge has suspended former attorney David Quatrella from practicing law in Connecticut for six years. Quatrella was sentenced to prison last year for insurance fraud.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Marc Garfinkle | November 8, 2018
As lawyers, we wear many hats. Among them is a crown designating us Keepers of the Truth. We didn't ask for it. It came with job. Good luck with the quest.
By Victoria Hudgins | November 8, 2018
The American Bar Association issued guidance regarding lawyers' obligations under the Model Rules of Professional Conduct to prevent a breach of client's data and their ethical responsibilities if a breach occurs.
By Michael Booth | November 7, 2018
A three-judge Appellate Division panel in an unpublished decision brushed aside a slew of objections raised by the ex-lawyer, Eugene Lavergne, to how his 2014 trial was handled.
By Charles Toutant | November 7, 2018
Authorities have tracked James Ray III to Cuba and returned him to New Jersey after he allegedly shot and killed the mother of his 6-year-old daughter.
By Charles Toutant | November 7, 2018
Authorities have tracked James Ray III to Cuba and returned him to New Jersey after he allegedly shot and killed the mother of his 6-year-old daughter.
By Schnader's YL Q&A Panelists | November 7, 2018
Here is this month's Q&A on (1) doing quality work, (2) getting courtroom experience, and (3) drinking at business meals.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Ellen C. Brotman | November 7, 2018
Conflicts and confidences are the ethical tripwires of our profession. What may seem like a reasonable assumption about the alignment of parties and the necessity of maintaining confidences at the outset of a case can quickly become a quagmire, especially in the context or organizational or joint representations.
By Eden Landow | November 6, 2018
Georgia's high court said Monday that a disbarred attorney may be licensed to practice law in the Georgia, upon satisfaction of certain requirements.
By Andrew Denney | November 5, 2018
The MTA claims that David Roth of Roth & Roth, who represents Luisa Harger da Silva in her personal injury suit against the authority, broke the “no contact” rule when he engaged New York City Transit Authority president Andy Byford about safety improvements to subway platforms.
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