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Immigration System All Tied Up in Knots
Multiple agencies, seemingly arbitrary rulings and other sources of confusion and frustration have immigration attorneys ... confused and frustrated. Especially, it turns out, in Los Angeles.Lawyers, Courts Grapple With Work During Storm
Law firms and the courts scrambled this morning to keep employees safe and to maintain some semblance of normal operations as waters lapped over Manhattan sea walls. Courts and some firms closed, but many lawyers came to work and others worked remotely. But howling winds were a reminder that it was uncertain how long power would be available.The Churn: Lateral Moves and Promotions in the Am Law 200
BuckleySandler expands with a veteran of the U.S. attorney's office in Manhattan; K&L Gates strengthens its product liability practice with two partners; and McCarter & English adds a total of three attorneys in New York and Newark.The Churn is constant. Please send all announcements to [email protected].Immigration docket all tied up in knots
Lawyers in Los Angeles involved in representing immigrants seeking permanent residency in the United States are increasingly frustrated with multiple governmental agencies that often don't coordinate with one another. The problem, they said, is particularly acute in Los Angeles, which has more immigration judges than any other region and a noticeably crowded docket. But, as the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals reasoned in a recent decision, a busy calendar alone isn't necessarily enough reason to deny a continuance.Lawyers, Courts Grapple With Work During Storm
Law firms and the courts scrambled this morning to keep employees safe and to maintain some semblance of normal operations as waters began to lap over Manhattan sea walls as fears grew of much worse to come. Courts and some firms closed, but many lawyers came to work and others worked remotely. But howling winds were a reminder that it was uncertain how long power would be available.Regional law firms dance the annual on-off shuffle
The annual exchange of law firms that earned or relinquished spots on the NLJ 250 involved 16 shops, with several in the southern and eastern parts of the country staking a claim on the list while others from the Midwest bidding adieu. Most of the law firms disappearing from this year's NLJ 250, The National Law Journal's annual survey of the nation's largest law firms, came from the last 50 or so spots on the list, reflecting the typical ups and downs of firm populations. But not typical is this year's economy, and just how it ultimately may affect law firms on the lower part of the list — those that have about 200 attorneys or fewer — hinges in large part on geography.The Churn: Lateral Moves and Promotions in The Am Law 200
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