By Victoria Hudgins | March 22, 2019
The new Jet.Law firm deploys machine learning to forecast a case's workload and uses that prediction to set a fixed monthly rate for clients.
By Jenna Greene | March 22, 2019
A shout-out to our Litigator of the Week runners up from Clare Locke; Reed Smith and Beveridge & Diamond.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By John A. McCreary Jr. | March 21, 2019
Although to date there have been no cases reported under Pennsylvania's MMA, several courts in other jurisdictions have considered employment issues arising under similar medical marijuana statutes. The uncertainty is lessening; the smoke is beginning to clear.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Edward T. Kang | March 21, 2019
Several years ago, my insurance broker suggested I get cybersecurity insurance for my firm. It seemed a cybersecurity insurance policy was unnecessary, not much different from having an undercoating for a new car.
By Kacy Miller | March 20, 2019
“What kind of story can we tell the jury that makes it OK to ambush a caseworker and a trooper?”This is the QOTD for Dr. Jason Bull, Benny…
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Lawrence W. Newman and David Zaslowsky | March 20, 2019
The competence-competence principle—that is, whether arbitrators are competent to decide if a dispute is arbitrable—is an important gateway issue in arbitration. This article looks at how that issue has developed under US law and compares it to how it is handled in foreign courts.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 20, 2019
Two Stanford students have filed a cause of action saying their degrees have been devalued because the university was targeted the in the admissions fraud scheme. And a rejected student is seeking $5 billion in a suit against the alleged scammers.
By Ellis Kim | March 19, 2019
The trial involved a drunken pedestrian who had passed out in the middle of the roadway at night.
By Robert Storace | March 18, 2019
The U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Connecticut announced Monday that former U.S. Attorney Nora Dannehy would be returning to the office as counsel.
By Ross Todd | March 18, 2019
The firm claims that its prior representation of Uber wasn't substantially related to the antitrust claims it's pursuing on behalf of the ride-hailing app's defunct rival Sidecar.
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