0 results for 'Stewarts Law'
PLW People in the News—Dec. 12, 2023—King Spry, Ogletree Deakins
The King, Spry, Herman, Freund & Faul law firm in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, announced senior counsel attorney Brian J. Taylor has been named chair of the firm's investigations and compliance services team.Frontier Ambulance Sues Competitor, Claiming It Used Its Photos Without Permission
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.Texas Lawyer's Top Attorneys Under 40
"Rising Stars" identifies lawyers under the age of 40 who are experts in their fields and have made an impact in the legal world.More Than Half of King & Spalding's New Partners Are in 3 Cities
Meanwhile, many of the new partners are in litigation and regulatory—counter-cyclical practice areas to which many of its Am Law 100 peers are also focusing in their partner promotions.Salt Lake Sees More Big Law Interest, as Spencer Fane Enters Through Merger
"We do not have a business plan or profit formula that requires the four-figure rates that some of the other firms entering that market are probably expecting," chair Pat Whalen said.View more book results for the query "Stewarts Law"
Rejecting Target's Predominance Arguments, Federal Judge Certifies Class in Wage-and-Hour Action
"Apparently, it is unclear whether [Target's] policy is lawful under the Pennsylvania Minimum Wage Act. Class certification offers an attractively efficient way to provide that pivotal answer and address the large number of relatively modest claims at issue," held U.S. District Judge John F. Murphy.Justice O'Connor's Clerks Recall a People Person Focused on the Practical
"She was just kind of a mother hen, in addition to the great role she played on the Supreme Court," Cornell Law School professor Stewart Schwab said.On The Move: Nelson Mullins Adds Immigration Partner; Kilpatrick Gains Stroock Partner
Nelson Mullins has a "large number of national clients" needing assistance with navigating the "highly complex and evolving" legal restrictions on hiring foreign workers, said partner John Jennings.Protecting Children of Divorce Against Weaponized Social Media, Part 2: What's Being Done?
The use of social media as a weapon in custody cases is a pressing concern. In February and March, he Appellate Division, Second Department ruled on two groundbreaking cases that address the issue—Kassenoff v. Kassenoff and Walsh v. Russell—deciding that narrowly tailored orders prohibiting a divorce litigant from posting on social media during a divorce are constitutionally permissible if the speech to be restrained is likely to produce a serious danger to children. In his three-part series, Gus Dimopoulos, a representative for Allan Kassenoff, the litigant who succeeded in obtaining an order prohibiting social media posting in his divorce, examines the importance the above rulings have on protecting children of divorcing parents. This Part 2 looks at how social media companies and the courts are falling short on providing protection to children.Newsmakers: Former Huntsman Associate GC Joins Mayer Brown's Houston Office
Also: Leaders establish Dallas Insurance Law American Inn of CourtTrending Stories
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