By John Council | December 1, 2017
Texas says goodbye to Ted Z. Robertson, one of the state's last Democratic high court justices.
By Ross Todd | November 30, 2017
In what might best be termed a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad week for Uber Technologies Inc. and its outside lawyers, Michael Li-Ming Wong of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher gave the company a sorely needed legal win.
By Cogan Schneier | November 30, 2017
The research firm behind the so-called 'Steele' dossier is fighting a congressional subpoena for its clients' bank record in federal court.
By Katheryn Tucker | November 30, 2017
Professor Eric Segall of Georgia State University law school talked about the nude dancing club owners' lawsuit with Celeste Headlee during Georgia Public Broadcasting's On Second Thought program this week.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jeffrey Campolongo | November 30, 2017
With the recent spate of sexual harassment and sexual misconduct cases populating the cable news and talk radio airwaves we decided to take a closer look at two recently decided cases.
By Katheryn Tucker | November 29, 2017
The winning legal team from Fish & Richardson said in a news release Wednesday that it was the first patent jury verdict in U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Georgia since 2001 and the first in the entire state since 2008.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Emilie Pitts | November 29, 2017
You have worked as an art teacher for over 20 years. You are both meticulous in planning and a creative mastermind. Your work has led you to create a painting program exclusively for children in your classroom. The idea catches on and a summer camp in a nearby town wants to use your program in their camp curriculum. Great news! What's next?
Corporate Counsel | Expert Opinion
By Adam Rosenthal | November 29, 2017
The late U.S. Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan often reminded his Senate colleagues that “everyone is entitled to his own opinions, but not his own facts.” Had Sen. Moynihan been a trial attorney, his mantra would have likely been, “in litigation, attorneys are entitled to rely on their own reading of the facts, but the only opinions that actually mater are those of the judge and jury.”
By Jenna Greene | November 29, 2017
Bittersweet. That's how Hogan Lovells partner Neal Katyal describes breaking Thurgood Marshall's record, set in 1967, as the minority lawyer with the most oral arguments before the U.S. Supreme Court.
By Cogan Schneier | November 28, 2017
The telecommunications giant pushed back Tuesday against the Justice Department's antitrust lawsuit.
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