By Amanda Bronstad | March 24, 2021
The book is closed on the first Roundup products liability verdict, with Bayer announcing it wouldn't seek review from the U.S. Supreme Court.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Rena Paul and Michelle Mason | March 24, 2021
Prosecutorial well-being empowers prosecutors to best serve the community by first supporting themselves.
By Ross Todd | March 10, 2021
Winters, who is in the process of retiring from Sidley Austin to deal with a painful nerve disease in his feet, said a lightbulb went off for him when a friend asked if he would refer a client to himself knowing what he knows about his condition.
Litigation Daily | Conversation
By Ross Todd | March 10, 2021
Winters, who is in the process of retiring from Sidley Austin to deal with a painful nerve disease in his feet, said a lightbulb went off for him when a friend asked if he would refer a client to himself knowing what he knows about his condition.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | March 4, 2021
"The phones were not ringing. It was like crickets," said Hartford personal injury lawyer Peter Casey.
By Vern Winters | March 3, 2021
What if you had to walk away from your career, right at its height, because of a debilitating disease? Vern Winters, who is in the process of retiring from Sidley Austin, writes about having to face those facts—and to find a way past them.
By Vern Winters | March 3, 2021
What if you had to walk away from your career, right at its height, because of a debilitating disease? Vern Winters, who is in the process of retiring from Sidley Austin, writes about having to face those facts—and to find a way past them.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Patrick Smith | March 1, 2021
For all the success Big Law had in 2020, in large part due to a common rallying cry, a new problem now comes into play: What happens when that unifying crisis is no longer there?
By Ryan Tarinelli | February 26, 2021
Operating throughout the state, mental health courts aim to respond to defendants with mental illness and can link them to long-term treatment instead of incarceration, according to a press release.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Charles Toutant | February 25, 2021
Not everyone is convinced, but some experts say the strains of struggling to pay bills can cause a lawyer who had been a straight arrow to run their practice in an imprudent or illegal manner.
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