0 results for 'Stroock'
South Florida's Popularity Propels Law Firm Headcount Growth in 2022
Overall, just 29 of the firms saw declines in headcount last year. That number was 44 in 2021.Judges Must Pause Lawsuits During Arbitration Appeals, Supreme Court Rules
In 5-4 decision, the court sides with cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase.Mid-Year Round-Up: There Is A Lot Going On
There is a lot going on. The U.S. Supreme Court in Allen v. Milligan has just affirmed an Alabama district court's ruling that the state's congressional lines were an impermissible racial gerrymander, thereby preserving, at least for now, what remains of the historic Voting Rights Act's protections.Will Trump Lawyers Testifying Erode Others' Trust in Their Lawyers?
The ongoing Trump saga, in which a number of lawyers have testified against him, brings some of the issues created by the government's seeming lack of respect for the privilege and the sacrosanct nature of the attorney-client relationship to the fore, two columnists write.Legal Considerations, Challenges of Office Conversions to Solve NY's Housing Shortage
Cities such as Pittsburgh, Boston and Washington, D.C. have issued revitalization plans to set the framework for OTR conversions, and Seattle recently launched a competition requesting owners and design firms to come up with conversion ideas.View more book results for the query "Stroock"
Big Law Continues to Face Layoffs, Deferrals Amid Depressed Demand
Several Big Law firms have announced layoffs and associate class deferrals as they face depressed demand across sectors and geographies.When a Prosecutor Should Confess Error for Ethical Reasons
But what if the prosecutor's office determines that a convicted defendant in jail may have been wrongly convicted but is actually guilty? What is their obligation then? Can they just sit on their hands and do nothing? Or, if only as a matter of legal ethics, must they try to repair the wrongful conviction by asking the courts to set it aside, even if they believe the defendant is guilty?CUNY Law: Does 'Free Speech' Mean a Right to Platform Too?
How far should a law school go in offering a platform for unquestionably divisive speech that claims to support such "human need" using the medium of scurrilous attack?No Recusal Needed for US Judge Tasked With Trump Removal Decision, Lawyers Agree
In new court filings, both prosecutors and defense attorneys said Senior U.S. District Judge Alvin Hellerstein, who worked as an attorney at Stroock for a Trump business entity, should not step aside.When Rainmakers Leave, Partners Ask 'Should I Stay or Should I Go?'
A string of individual departures along with an increase in group moves at both Shearman & Sterling and Stroock & Stroock & Lavin bring attention to the calculations partners need to make when they gain a sense their firm may be in distress.Trending Stories
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