0 results for 'Ray Quinney Nebeker'
Midsize law firm carves winter sports practice
Rick Thaler, head of Ray Quinney & Nebeker's winter sports group, talks to NLJ about how his practice has changed in recent years and the eternal debate about which method to descend a snowy slope is superior.Wilson Sonsini to close Salt Lake City office
Within two months, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati says it will close the 13-lawyer Salt Lake City outpost it opened in 2001. The firm says the office's closing is not "a failure" and was driven by a decision to bring partner Robert O'Connor back to the San Francisco Bay Area to help organize and manage Wilson Sonsini's growing clean-tech practice. Longtime corporate partner Mark Bonham (pictured) will remain in Utah, bringing four associates with him to 90-lawyer local firm Ray Quinney & Nebeker.Wilson Sonsini to Close Salt Lake City Office
Within two months, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati says it will close the 13-lawyer Salt Lake City outpost it opened in 2001. The firm says the office's closing is not "a failure" and was driven by a decision to bring partner Robert O'Connor back to the San Francisco Bay Area to help organize and manage Wilson Sonsini's growing clean-tech practice. Longtime corporate partner Mark Bonham (pictured) will remain in Utah, bringing four associates with him to 90-lawyer local firm Ray Quinney & Nebeker.One firm's Olympic 2008 race has already begun
Kelly Crabb will help carry the Olympic torch — at least its legal weight. The Los Angeles-based partner with Morrison & Foerster is co-chairing the firm's legal services team for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.Wilson Sonsini to Close Salt Lake Office
Saying they need to bring one of their two partners home to kickstart the clean-tech practice, the firm pulls the plug on its Utah outpost.Courts still at odds over rights of transsexuals
A ground-breaking decision by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last year opened doors for transsexuals to bring discrimination lawsuits against their employers, but some lower federal courts are still holding to older precedents that bar Title VII claims.Courts Still at Odds Over Transsexuals' Civil Rights
A groundbreaking decision by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last year opened doors for transsexuals to bring discrimination lawsuits against their employers, but some lower federal courts are still holding to older precedents that bar Title VII claims.Courts Divided on Transsexual Bias Suits
Last year, the Sixth Circuit ruled to allow transsexuals to bring discrimination suits against their employers. But some lower federal courts are sticking to precedents that do not consider transsexuals a protected class.Courts Still at Odds Over Transsexuals' Civil Rights
A groundbreaking decision by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last year opened doors for transsexuals to bring discrimination lawsuits against their employers. But some lower federal courts are still holding to older precedents that bar Title VII claims. "Either the circuits are going to get in line behind Smith or they are going to split," said attorney Chris Daley of the Transgender Law Center. If the circuits split, the issue may be headed for the U.S. Supreme Court, he added.Trending Stories
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