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Hurricane Delta Shutters Courts, Postpones Louisiana's Remote Bar Exam
"IT IS ORDERED THAT: The Louisiana Supreme Court Offices and the Supreme Court Clerk of Court's office will be closed Friday, October 9, 2020," Chief Justice Bernette J. Johnson said.Opioid Trials in W.Va., Ohio Placed on Hold Due to COVID-19 Pandemic
This week, federal judges postponed high-profile trials over the opioid crisis due to the COVID-19 pandemic, further complicating efforts to resolve thousands of lawsuits brought by cities, counties and states.Justice Department Sues Yale Over Race-Based Admissions Policy
The federal government filed suit in federal court in Connecticut alleging Ivy League Yale University discriminates in its undergraduate admissions policy. But Yale vowed not to change a thing.Unfair Bar Exam, Ignored Emails, Racism in Civil Litigation: What You Said
The 2020 bar exam will go down in history as the single most controversial instance of the test. In one of the top quotes from the week in legal news,…Icon Brickell Condo Owner's Lawsuit Contesting W Hotel Control Survives Appeal
An Icon Brickell Tower 3 owner sued the condo association over how much control was given to the W Miami Hotel in the same tower.View more book results for the query "*"
COVID-19 Exposure Shutters Forsyth County Courthouse a Second Time
Superior Court Chief Judge Jeff Bagley closed the county courthouse for the second time in two months after a courthouse visitor tested positive for the virus.Willkie Announces Fall Bonuses, Potentially Reviving Associate Compensation War
Willkie is the first firm to match Davis Polk's fall associate bonus scale since Cravath, Swaine & Moore declined to do so last week.'Schrems II,' the Court Decision That Disrupted the International Transmission of Personal Data
The aftershocks of Edward Snowden's actions reverberated across the European Union, which unlike the United States, has developed a detailed regime of regulations to protect the privacy of the citizens in its member states, writes Technology Law columnist Peter Brown.Senate Litigation Could Resolve the Supreme Court Confirmation Debate
The Senate's failure to follow a consistent policy for considering Supreme Court nominees is unconstitutional. Instead of succumbing to political bulldozing by their Republican colleagues, Democratic Senators can, and should, resort to the courts to check this arbitrary and unconstitutional maneuvering.Trending Stories
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Strong & Hanni Solves Storage Woes--Learn How You Can, Too
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Meeting the Requirements of California's SB 553: Workplace Violence Prevention
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The Benefits of Outsourcing Beneficial Ownership Information Filing
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The Top 10 AI Use Cases in Private Equity
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