0 results for 'National Football League'
Miami Firms on Offense to Serve Elusive Defendant, With Help From Ga. Process Server
"It was quite an easy win, but you had to find him and get that video to make it an easy win," said plaintiff counsel Michael Lotto of the Ward Law Group.Miami Firms on Offense to Serve Elusive Defendant
"It was quite an easy win, but you had to find him and get that video to make it an easy win," said plaintiff counsel Michael Lotto of the Ward Law Group.Bond Counsel Law Firms See Mixed Results in 2023
One Georgia law firm leader predicted an increase in bond issue values in Q4 because many local governments nationwide still have needs for financing for new construction and upgrades.'Litigators Know How to Multitask': How the GC of the NFL's Chargers Also Runs Her Own Law Firm
"I look at the games and I think, 'That performer is out there because there was a contract that we did.' You look at games differently. I love being part of it. It's exciting," said Deborah Dixon, the Los Angeles Chargers' GC and founding partner of The Dixon Firm.View more book results for the query "National Football League"
Disbarred Florida Attorney Sentenced to 14 Years in Federal Prison
The 62-year-old disbarred attorney previously pled guilty to racketeering over his involvement in a criminal enterprise to defraud his clients of funds from an NFL class action lawsuit.Lawyers on the Fast Track 2023: Susan Gutierrez
The Proskauer Rose partner is being recognized as one of more than 40 Lawyers on the Fast Track as part of The Recorder's California Legal Awards.Lawyers on the Fast Track 2023: Neema Sahni
The partner and co-chair of music industry group and vice chair of sports industry group at Covington & Burling is being recognized as one of more than 40 Lawyers on the Fast Track as part of The Recorder's California Legal Awards.Newsmakers: Weil Welcomes All-Women Associate Class in Dallas
Also: Alexander Dubose & Jefferson welcomes Kayla Oliver to the firm's Austin office.Judge Dismisses Favre's Defamation Suit, Saying Sharpe Used Hyperbole Over Welfare Money
U.S. District Judge Keith Starrett ruled that Sharpe, a former tight end, was using "rhetorical hyperbole" in saying on air that Favre was "taking from the underserved," that the former quarterback "stole money from people that really needed that money" and that someone would have to be a sorry person "to steal from the lowest of the low."Trending Stories
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