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Who Rules the World of Litigation Funding?
Commercial litigation finance is a growing industry. But when it comes to the people who laid its foundations and those who are propelling the business today, it is an exceedingly small and interconnected world. Many key figures trace their roots to elite law firms or Wall Street institutions.Change of Heart in Georgia Costs Chicago Lawyer a SCOTUS Argument
Adam Mortara, a former Clarence Thomas clerk working at Bartlit Beck Herman Palenchar & Scott, had been slated to defend a habeas decision authored by Eleventh Circuit Judge William Pryor. Then the Georgia attorney general's office agreed to step up.6 Steps to Excellent E-Discovery in Product Liability Litigation
Product liability litigation brings with it some unique e-discovery challenges, risks and costs for litigants on both sides of the table.In Shift, More SCOTUS Clerks Seek Jobs Outside the Beltway
Almost half of the 39 clerks from last term are now working outside Washington, D.C. Possible explanations include greater interest by New York firms, the draw of returning to home, saturation of the D.C. market, and even the 2016 presidential election.Texas Roadhouse GC Ready to Fight EEOC Age Suit Again
After five years of battling federal regulators over an age bias lawsuit that ended in a mistrial on Feb. 3, Texas Roadhouse Inc. general counsel Celia Catlett is gearing up to do it all over again.One of Scalia's Final Law Clerks Looks Back and Ahead
Jonathan Urick vividly remembers the last time he and his fellow law clerks saw their boss, U.S. Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia. "We were laughing and joking. He was in very high spirits, making jokes," he recalled. Ten months later, Urick is a new associate at McGuireWoods in Richmond—one of seven former Supreme Court clerks working at the firm. He is the first of Scalia's final four law clerks to publicly speak about his time in Scalia chambers that ended abruptly after the justice's death on Feb. 13.Facing Huge Verdicts, J&J Keeps Switching Its Lead Counsel
It's hardly surprising that Johnson & Johnson has hired a small army of lawyers to defend it in the many product liability cases it's facing, including the one that ended in a $1 billion verdict last week. What's more interesting, however, is J&J's approach to putting together its trial teams. The pharma giant keeps switching its lead counsel—a sign that J&J thinks it should be winning these cases, lawyers say.A Day in Court With Judge Margaret Ryan, Possible SCOTUS Nominee
Margaret Ryan is one of the 20 judges President-elect Donald Trump has named as possible nominees to the high court.A Day in Court With Judge Margaret Ryan, Possible Scotus Nominee
Judge Margaret "Meg" Ryan of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces doesn't match the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia's combative questioning and bluster during oral argument.A Day in Court With Judge Margaret Ryan, Possible Scotus Nominee
Margaret Ryan is one of the 20 judges President-elect Donald Trump has named as possible nominees to the high court.Trending Stories
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