By Ross Todd | March 8, 2022
"The quality of justice, I would propose to you, may be significantly better on remote than it was in the good old days of the cattle calls," said Bailey during a forum sponsored by the Legal Services Corporation.
By Ross Todd | March 3, 2022
"I actually think the act of taking a case to trial, preparing it for trial, and executing a trial is itself a specialty," says Karen Dunn of Paul Weiss.
By Ross Todd | March 2, 2022
Moyé, who went in-house as the general counsel of a healthcare client for about three years in the mid-2000s, said there are long-term consequences for continuously settling cases for less than defense costs.
By Ross Todd | March 1, 2022
Even though the transactional sides of large law firms seem to be the primary drivers of record profits across the industry, litigation-heavy firms have so far posted strong returns — especially Texas firms busy handling the litigation fallout from Winter Storm Uri.
By Ross Todd | February 24, 2022
Selendy Gay Elsberg founder Faith Gay and managing partner Maria Ginzburg discuss some of the advantages firms like theirs have in the war for future trial talent.
By Ross Todd | February 23, 2022
"When you get a window into an adversary that has basically operated in complete darkness, without any scrutiny — not even regulatory scrutiny — you can imagine how unguarded people are," says Chris Boehning of Paul Weiss.
By Ross Todd | February 17, 2022
"I think we're kidding ourselves if we don't think that a trial is a story and a drama," says Dodd, a trial lawyer with a background in TV journalism.
By Ross Todd | February 16, 2022
"I think if you had more lawyers who understood the trial dynamic and could really meaningfully assess risk at trial and were willing to do that, you'd have more clients willing to go to trial," says Attanasio, the chair of the firm's global litigation department.
By Ross Todd | February 15, 2022
Lawyers at Berger Montague, FeganScott, Gilbert Litigators & Counselors, and Roche Freedman accuse the universities of participating in a price-fixing cartel that artificially inflated what students who receive financial aid paid for undergraduate studies.
By Ross Todd | February 9, 2022
"What we've advocated since before the indictment is if you simply read the actual rule, the question of LIBOR must have an answer: There was no crime here and that's where our representation started and that's where we are at this point ending up," Seth Levine says.
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