By Ross Todd | March 16, 2021
On what would have been Ruth Bader Ginsburg's 88th birthday, Justice Stephen Breyer delivered remarks to open a lecture series celebrating his late colleague at the National Judicial College. Meanwhile, a Colorado professor took to The New York Times opinion pages Monday to call on Breyer to retire immediately.
By Ross Todd | March 11, 2021
The ugly allegations are flying back and forth in dueling lawsuits between the founding partners of Roche Cyrulnik Freedman, a Boies Schiller Flexner spinoff. Litigators, it seems, spawn more than their fair share of litigious breakups.
By Ross Todd | February 23, 2021
While 75% of the 13,000 class members—mostly young people from abroad who have provided live-in childcare to families in the U.S.—have been able to cash checks, the undeposited checks that remain outstanding average almost $1,850.
By Raychel Lean | February 18, 2021
Armed with heartbreaking security footage, a toxicology report and testimony from witnesses around the country, jurors had to decide whether the former Tampa attorney died accidentally or by suicide.
By Joel R. Brandes and Chris McDonough | February 18, 2021
Should Rudy Giuliani be disciplined for his conduct relating to the Jan. 6 attack on the Capital and his participation in frivolous lawsuits?
By Ross Todd | February 17, 2021
In fast-paced, high-stakes pieces of litigation, winning at the temporary restraining order stage can often be the whole ballgame. Not this time.
By Ross Todd | February 9, 2021
Tuesday's Senate proceedings, which focused on the Constitutional question of whether a former president can stand trial for impeachment, had elements of both opening statements and appellate arguments.
By Ross Todd | February 8, 2021
Top judges from Nevada, Texas, Michigan and California detailed how the pandemic has forced them to make courts more accessible and service-oriented.
By Ross Todd | February 2, 2021
What can we all learn from this case study of a federal criminal jury that navigated the complicated early days of the pandemic?
By Ross Todd | January 27, 2021
A federal judge found plaintiffs hadn't alleged that real estate finance company Velocity Financial could have known the extent of the coronavirus pandemic at the time of its January 2020 IPO—meaning there was no need for any disclosures about the pandemic.
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