The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Lizzy McLellan | October 26, 2018
Facing a claim for $282,000 in allegedly unpaid fees from his criminal case, Bill Cosby countered that the work was never authorized.
By Karen Sloan | October 25, 2018
Ho Ka Terence Yung faces up to five years in prison for online harassment against a Georgetown University Law Center alum who interviewed him for admission and determined that the candidate had performed poorly.
By Karen Sloan | October 23, 2018
Law faculty are giving new cops in Washington a crash course on implicit bias, use of excessive force, homelessness, mental illness and other problems affecting their day-to-day job.
By Ian Lopez | October 22, 2018
In announcing criminal charges against a Russian national for partaking in a conspiracy to disrupt elections in the U.S. and abroad, the DOJ cited Facebook and Twitter for their "exceptional cooperation."
By Dan Packel | October 19, 2018
The university initially said Paul Weiss' Ted Wells Jr. would handle the probe into allegations involving a former archbishop, but former Obama White House Counsel Kathryn Ruemmler at Latham is now running the show.
By Ross Todd | October 10, 2018
In dissent, Judge Consuelo Callahan wrote, "The majority's we-see-no-reason-why-not approach does not justify its admittedly unprecedented—and unauthorized—intrusion of executive power."
By Erin Mulvaney | September 28, 2018
“Of course those are not admissible in federal court but I'll do whatever the committee wants," the Supreme Court nominee said Thursday. A 2016 ruling he wrote in the D.C. Circuit presents a more nuanced view of how these tests are used.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Lizzy McLellan | September 27, 2018
Schnader Harrison Segal & Lewis claims Cosby began failing to pay his bills to the firm last August.
The Legal Intelligencer | Analysis
By Lizzy McLellan | September 26, 2018
Bill Cosby's lawyers may grapple with competing strategies when it comes to limiting his sentence on the one hand, and his promised appeal on the other.
By Ross Todd | September 26, 2018
A federal judge found that Orrick had obtained three rounds of waivers from its client's co-defendants, whom the firm had previously represented, signing off on Orrick's continued involvement in the case.
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