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Cravath Hires Tax Partner, Its First Lateral in Decades
Cravath, Swaine & Moore has elected its first lateral partner in more than six decades. Andrew W. Needham, a tax partner at Willkie Farr & Gallagher, is expected to join the firm in April. Robert D. Joffe, the presiding partner at Cravath, called the hiring a "nearly unique event" that "represents a rare exception to" the firm's normal practice. Although the hiring of lateral partners has become routine, many elite New York firms prefer to select partners from within their own ranks only.Stewart Denied Request for Assurances on Monitoring
Indicted attorney Lynne Stewart and her co-defendants get no assurances that conversations with their lawyers, or any other communications, are free of monitoring by the federal government, a Southern District of New York judge ruled Thursday.Some of Ousted Pastor's Defamation Claims Proceed
Doctors Release Justice Benham From Hospital
Jonathan [email protected] at St. Joseph's Hospital on Wednesday released Georgia Supreme Court Justice Robert Benham, who suffered a heart attack on Monday.According to a release by the court's public information officer, Benham "is recuperating at home" and will not be in the office this week.View more book results for the query "*"
Minors May Recover Medical Expenses
Ruling that minors can collect medical expenses incurred during their minority, the state Supreme Court has cleared the way for the Department of Public Welfare to be reimbursed for Medicaid disbursements it has made on behalf of a minor.Atlanta Lawyer Plays Himself in New Reality TV Show
Antavius M. Weems is a lawyer in real life, and now he's playing one on a TV reality show featuring Toni Braxton and her family. Weems acknowledged the risk in using a reality show to promote his legal career, but notes that as Braxton's attorney, he gets some control over how he's portrayed.Third White Plaintiff Sues Dallas County DA's Office for Employment Bias
For the third time this month, a white current or former employee has sued the Dallas County District Attorney's Office and DA Craig Watkins alleging race discrimination. All three plaintiffs allege that they were fired or demoted and replaced with a less-qualified or less-experienced African-American employee. Watkins, the county's first African-American district attorney, says the three plaintiffs were demoted or fired because they did not qualify for the positions they had held under his predecessor.Trending Stories
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