The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Abbe David Lowell | December 9, 2020
"Let's kill the lawyers," Lowell writes. His work for the president's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, along with a clemency request he made for another client, has raised some suspicion. He says people are quicker to assume the worst motives more so now than in any time in the decades he's worked in Washington.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Catherine Smith and Trina Jones | December 8, 2020
This nation's lack of Black women in the federal judiciary is not due to a lack of talent but, rather, due to a lack of imagination and political will among those in power.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Tyler Cooper | December 7, 2020
A bill in Congress the two representatives—one a Democrat and the other a Republican—coauthored would modernize the way the public interacts with federal courts and save taxpayers tens of millions of dollars per year.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Thomas Prol | December 7, 2020
Considering that the overwhelming majority of Americans support the freedom to marry, the efforts to undo LGBT civil rights advances coming from the highest offices in the federal judiciary are doing grave harm.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Vivia Chen | November 23, 2020
Vivia Chen looks back at the good, the bad and the weird of 2020.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Vivia Chen | November 20, 2020
A year later (and god knows how much in legal bills), Wachtell Lipton is taking over investigating the mess at L Brands.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Kamal Ghali | November 18, 2020
Does the FTC really have the power to undo deals that it approved five, 10 or even 30 years ago?
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Rafi Prober and Karen Christian | November 17, 2020
Against the nation's changing political landscape, corporate America should expect to be a chief target of congressional investigations.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Steven Tepp | November 17, 2020
Google asks the Supreme Court to walk away from the Founding Fathers' wisdom, congressional intent and the court's own precedent to excuse free-riding on Oracle's copyrighted work to build a massive commercial enterprise.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By George Gerachis and Matthew Jacobs | November 16, 2020
The IRS views disgorgement as a penalty, and thus not deductible as restitution, but the Supreme Court recently issued a decision in "Liu v. SEC" undercutting the IRS's rationale. In light of "Liu," the IRS needs to rethink its rationale.
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