National Law Journal | Analysis
By Abigail Adcox | July 19, 2024
"Beyond just supporting the Republican convention, you're starting to see corporate America really sort of warm up to a potential Trump presidency," a political law attorney said.
By Jimmy Hoover | July 19, 2024
"I think she has clearly distinguished herself from the most conservative wing of the court," Berkeley Law Dean Erwin Chemerinsky said of Amy Coney Barrett.
New York Law Journal | Profile
By Katharine Lee | July 19, 2024
Even at a young age, Lewis Steel was aware of the racial and socioeconomic gulfs that segregated people, and this reflected to him that "something was seriously wrong in society."
By Patrick Smith | Cedra Mayfield | July 19, 2024
In a recent interview, John Morgan, founder of Morgan & Morgan, shared the personal tragedy that inspired his career, how the power of digital marketing helped his firm grow into the largest personal injury firm in the United States and what comes next as he considers retirement.
By Amanda Bronstad | July 19, 2024
"Can you point to a single case in the history of litigation where a judge awarded class counsel a multiplier on work performed by other lawyers?" U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria asked attorney John Yanchunis.
By Maydeen Merino | July 18, 2024
The Environmental Protection Agency will "face a much more skeptical federal judiciary," said Robert Glicksman, a George Washington University law professor.
By Sulaiman Abdur-Rahman | July 18, 2024
The SEC seeks disgorgement of any alleged "ill-gotten gains" from Miami businessman Patrick Orlando and civil penalties on allegations he gave false statements concealing a plot to acquire Trump Media.
By Emily Saul | July 18, 2024
The judge explained that under the American Bar Association's "shadow guidelines"—an alternative the U.S. Sentencing Commission's guidelines—he felt Anatoly Legkodymov had already served a sentence in that range during pre-trial detention.
By Avalon Zoppo | July 18, 2024
Raymond Kethledge seemed doubtful of the Biden administration's argument that a 1991 U.S. Supreme Court decision that relied on Chevron remains binding precedent.
By Abigail Adcox | July 18, 2024
"If it's going to cost us more to litigate than we can win, you've gutted Title IX without it being obvious," said Washington, D.C. plaintiff lawyer Laura Dunn.
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