By Katheryn Tucker | May 31, 2018
A state official has asked Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton for a legal opinion on interpreting prepaid funeral contracts, and invited other government and industry entities to weigh in.
By Karen Sloan | May 30, 2018
It's summer! Catch up on the best legal films and documentaries from the past nine months that you were too busy to watch.
By John Council | May 24, 2018
By a party-line, 11-10 vote, the committee referred Andrew Oldham, who serves as Texas Gov. Greg Abbott's general counsel, for confirmation by the full Senate.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Vivia Chen | May 15, 2018
Not to be alarmist, but some recent developments portend that the profession is going to hell.
By Karen Sloan | May 14, 2018
Despite the proposed change, most law schools will continue to use the LSAT in admissions even if the ABA's House of Delegates in August signs off on eliminating the LSAT's required use, experts said.
By MP McQueen | May 11, 2018
A battle over gun insurance may be forming with a New York regulator fining insurers and brokers of National Rifle Association-branded policies for selling policies within the state that cover legal costs connected with criminal defense expenses that might arise from legal gun ownership.
By John Council | May 4, 2018
“The SDTX regularly prosecutes multiple thousands of illegal entry, illegal re-entry and smuggling cases per year,” said Ryan Patrick, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Texas. “These new attorneys will go toward increased enforcement of the administration's zero-tolerance policy toward those who illegally enter the county and other immigration matters."
By Colby Hamilton | May 1, 2018
The latest request for interlocutory appeal the government is expected to file soon will join a previous request for the circuit court to review another motion to dismiss, as well as the current briefings occurring now over the nationwide injunction that's halted the wind-down of the immigration policy.
By Scott Graham | April 25, 2018
After Tuesday's ruling in SAS Institute v. Iancu, petitioners face a higher risk of getting a final written decisions finding challenged patent claims valid, leaving them estopped from fighting in district court.
By Michael Booth | April 25, 2018
A Texas appeals court has overturned $150,000 in sanctions, remanded for reconsideration an award of $375,383 in attorney fees, and vacated nonmonetary sanctions imposed by the trial judge on the operator of website purportedly aimed at stamping online bullying and other more lurid practices.
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