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A Trial Lawyer by Any Other Name ...
Following in the footsteps of the Association of Trial Lawyers of America's recent renaming, the new business cards for Atlanta-based plaintiffs firm Warshauer Thornton & Easom will identify its lawyers as "civil justice attorneys." The new moniker "better defines what we do," according to managing partner Michael J. Warshauer, who says the public's perception of the profession would improve if other plaintiffs lawyers followed suit.Harper v. NYC Administration for Children's Services
Complaint's Service Deemed Timely But Title VII Claim Time Barred as Three Years After DiscriminationView more book results for the query "*"
Montana wins a round in water lawsuit
BILLINGS, Mont. AP - A U.S. Supreme Court appointee has rejected Wyoming's bid to dismiss a lawsuit in which it is accused, by Montana, of taking too much water from rivers shared by the two states.Montana filed its lawsuit before the nation's highest court in 2007. The suit alleged Wyoming's agriculture and energy industries were pulling too much water from the Tongue and Powder rivers, tributaries of the Yellowstone.Panelists Say Recession Changed Management, Training for Lawyers
The recession has pressured law firms, in-house legal departments and law schools alike to provide competent legal services at a lower cost, while also promoting work-life balance.Appellate Courts Wrestle With Diversity Issues
Texas appellate court jurists interviewed by Texas Lawyer say that diversity among their attorney ranks is important at their courts. The percentage of minorities working as staff attorneys at the courts is lower than the percentage of minorities licensed to practice law in Texas. David Chew of El Paso's Court of Appeals says, "As the only Asian-American judge in Texas, I'm keen on it [diversity]."Lawyers seek halt on Georgia executions
DEATH PENALTY lawyers have, in the past, unsuccessfully argued in Georgia courts that the state's lethal injection procedures are inhumane, but they hope to have better luck now as they try to stop two executions set for later this month.Standing in their way are prosecutors seeking justice for the victims, backed by aggressive enforcement of Georgia's death penalty from Attorney General Thurbert Baker's office.Trending Stories
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