By Angela Morris | January 24, 2019
Working moms face bias and stigma, dubbed the “motherhood penalty,” said Liz Morris, a professor and deputy director of the Center for WorkLife Law at the University of California, Hastings College of the Law.
By Scott Flaherty | January 24, 2019
According to a court ruling, an associate in Vancouver was duped into wiring the money to a Hong Kong bank account by fraudsters with knowledge of the firm's work on a real estate deal.
By Ryan Lovelace | January 23, 2019
In a new federal lawsuit, the firm claims IP litigator Jay Deshmukh breached a deal to pay the firm $96,000 to waive a 60-day notice provision.
By Angela Morris | January 23, 2019
With women still carrying the bulk of child care responsibilities, lawyer-moms working long hours handle the kid-care challenge with creativity and precision.
By Caroline Spiezio | January 23, 2019
Screaming opposing counsel, disrespectful outside counsel and more than one letter addressed to “Dear Sir” are situations women general counsel said they've faced in-house from firm lawyers. Outside counsel's sexism can play a role in who GCs choose not to hire.
By Nate Robson | January 22, 2019
The slate includes picks for district courts in Virginia, Florida, Georgia, Texas, New York and Pennsylvania.
By Scott Flaherty | January 22, 2019
According to a court ruling, an associate in Vancouver was duped into wiring the money to a Hong Kong bank account by fraudsters with knowledge of the firm's work on a real estate deal.
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By H. Lee Sarokin | January 22, 2019
The president praises a convicted felon for not cooperating with law enforcement and condemns one who has cooperated, and Mr. Giuliani remains silent. The president characterizes John Dean who was responsible for the disclosure of Richard Nixon's criminal conduct as a “rat,” and Mr. Giuliani remains silent.
By Charles Toutant | January 18, 2019
A New Jersey man has taken a Midwestern law school to court after it revoked his admission for failing to disclose a criminal record.
By Dan Packel | January 18, 2019
The kind of intentional overbilling a former Kirkland & Ellis lawyer recently admitted to is rare, experts say. But when it does occur, it can be seen as another consequence of law firms' questionable attachment to the billable hour.
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