By Amanda Bronstad | December 5, 2023
In a Tuesday motion, Johnson & Johnson said that Beasley Allen principal Andy Birchfield had struck an alliance with one of its former lawyers, James Conlan, at Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath.
New Jersey Law Journal | News|Profile
By Colleen Murphy | December 5, 2023
Alexander Shalom, the senior supervising attorney and director of Supreme Court advocacy at the American Civil Liberties Union's New Jersey chapter, argued before the New Jersey Supreme Court for the 100th time last week.
By Charles Toutant | December 5, 2023
A lawyer for Davis Saperstein & Salomon says its suit against the former attorney "is narrow, in that it only seeks to enforce two agreements that were mutually agreed upon by the parties."
By Jimmy Hoover | December 5, 2023
Justices issue decision despite "concern about litigants manipulating the jurisdiction of this Court" by abandoning cases headed for appeal.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | December 5, 2023
Litigation boutiques and other small firms compete for the same top law students as Big Law, so they are likely to move to the new, higher market salary and bonus scales for associates.
By Charles Toutant | December 4, 2023
"When you add that wrinkle to it, and you have to focus a jury's attention on the fact that he is being discriminated against because of a perception that he's gay as opposed to actually being gay, it adds a wrinkle," plaintiffs lawyer R. Armen McOmber said.
By Cassandre Coyer | December 4, 2023
Smokeball's 2024 State of Law Report found that firms' adoption of artificial intelligence will likely depend on their size, use cases and practice areas.
By Charles Toutant | December 4, 2023
Plaintiffs lawyer Jon Green said he heard messages of encouragement from lawyers whose clients were faced with fees of as much as $1,500 an hour in cases ranging from police civil rights to clergy sexual abuse.
By Colleen Murphy | December 1, 2023
"The Joint Venture, however, argues that its noncompliance was a mere technicality, and we should not apply the PWCRA as written," Judge Avis Bishop-Thompson wrote for the court. "We reject this argument because if the statute is to be changed, that is the province of the Legislature. Any other outcome creates uncertainty."
By Allison Dunn | December 1, 2023
"We find that Doe waived his claims of confidentiality under the Act by voluntarily and publicly disclosing his private health information in a public trial, and the qualified protective order under HIPAA did not preclude such waiver," Justice P. Scott Neville Jr., wrote.
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