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Billable hours aren't the only game in town anymore
The percentages given below denote the estimated portions of the firms' revenues obtained through each of these two categories. The percentages are followed by the billing methods that the firms reported using within the two categories. The number given after each firm's name indicates its total number of attorneys. The firms provided the information in response to The National Law Journal's 2007 law firm survey.Getting Ready for Reviews Is a Year-Round Affair
Q: My firm's associate review procedure only allows associates to choose firm partners as their reviewers, as opposed to other senior associates. Although this may be standard practice, I have only just finished my first year at this large law firm and, on some of my assignments, I have not had any contact with the partner in charge.Legal groups line up against proposal to investigate Gitmo lawyers
The American Bar Association and other legal organizations are urging leaders of the Senate Armed Services Committee to resist a provision in a House defense bill that directs the Department of Defense's inspector general to investigate lawyers representing Guantanamo Bay detainees.Ogletree Boosts Profits by Letting Shareholders Pick Nonequity Track
Anne BerrymanSpecial to the Daily ReportAt Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak Stewart, revenue was flat and net income fell, but equity partners' profits still saw the second-highest increase in the Daily Report Dozen."It was a good year, not a great year, but a good year," said L. Gray Geddie Jr., the firm's managing partner.Charter Communications Properties v. County of San Luis Obispo
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Staring Down a Billion-Dollar Verdict, It's Not Easy to Continue the Fight
When Abbott Laboratories was hit with a huge jury verdict on a patent infringement suit, no one felt more pressure than general counsel Laura Schumacher. She had to recommend whether the company should settle — or roll the dice on an appeal. Schumacher was convinced her company was in the right. But she'd felt the same way right up to the day in June 2009 when the jury awarded the plaintiff, Centocor Ortho Biotech Inc., $1.67 billion.Former Inmate Credits State Judge's "Gumption" for Release
A 76-year-old man sentenced in 1962 to life in prison is learning how to live as a free man after a judge who took an interest in the man's story dismissed the charge against him. Robert Carroll Coney, who has spent most of the past 42 years in one prison or another, says he is adjusting "slowly but surely" to life in the free world.An Ex-FBI Cybersecurity Expert's Dire Warnings for Corporate America
Shawn Henry, formerly of the FBI and now with security technology company CrowdStrike Services, says executives need to start making corporate cybersecurity a top priority -- or else.Smith Helms Splits at Fork in Practice
Julia D. [email protected] increasingly divergent practice areas, North Carolina's Smith Helms Mulliss Moore has split. The reorganization took effect on Friday and the nine-lawyer Atlanta segment is now part of Greensboro, N.C.-based Smith Moore. The firm split directly along the lines on which it was created in 1986 when Charlotte, N.Trending Stories
Law Offices of Gary Martin Hays & Associates, P.C.
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Law Offices of Mark E. Salomone
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Smith & Hassler
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