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February 03, 2003 | Texas Lawyer

The El Paso way

El Paso has been on the cutting edge of appointing lawyers to indigent defendants since 1987, when the county's leaders crafted a pragmatic solution to the city's bulging county jail population. That solution accomplishes the main mandate of Texas' one-year-old Fair Defense Act: the timely appointment of qualified counsel to indigent defendants. Indigent defendants in El Paso usually speak with an experienced attorney within 24 hours
13 minute read
January 05, 2009 | Texas Lawyer

Inadmissible

"Roper Moves On" and "Going Private"
3 minute read
November 03, 2008 | Texas Lawyer

When the Law Group Spans the Oceans: Managing a Mix of Languages, Time Zones and Service Standards

Once upon a time, a corporate law department consisted of just one office housing a team of lawyers. But increasingly, as companies do business around the globe, some of the in-house counsel who make that possible are located in foreign offices -- and for some law departments, in a raft of foreign offices.
9 minute read
June 28, 2011 | Texas Lawyer

Marsh Raises New Set of Questions for Noncompetes

The court held that the consideration for a noncompete agreement — stock options in Marsh — was reasonably related to the company's interest in protecting its goodwill and therefore sufficient to support a noncompete. By this holding, the court changed the long-held view that money or financial considerations never could constitute consideration for a noncompete.
5 minute read
October 19, 2009 | Texas Lawyer

Judge William Wayne Justice's Legend Lives on in Opinions

Senior U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice (pictured), whose rulings led to prison reforms in Texas and the desegregation of the state's public schools, died Oct. 13 at the age of 89. Texas Lawyer reporter Miriam Rozen asked lawyers who knew Justice to share some of their memories about him.
5 minute read
February 18, 2013 | Texas Lawyer

Appellate Lawyer of the Week: Ruling the Roost

A Chapter 11 bankruptcy action provides a debtor with numerous protections from creditors. But sometimes getting that protection can be a challenge, as Dallas lawyer Clayton Bailey found out while defending Pilgrim's Pride Corp. from more than 100 individual creditors' claims for a collective $50 million in alleged contract obligations.
5 minute read
September 16, 2010 | Texas Lawyer

Brief Tells Story of V&E as Securities Litigation Target After Enron Collapse

A brief filed with the Supreme Court warns of "devastating consequences for the legal profession" if the justices allow lawyers and other third parties to be held liable for their background role in preparing allegedly fraudulent securities offerings. Kannon Shanmugam, a Washington, D.C., appellate partner in Williams & Connolly, filed the brief on behalf of Attorneys' Liability Assurance Society, a top professional insurance company for law firms.
3 minute read
July 11, 2005 | Texas Lawyer

Newsmakers

3 minute read
September 11, 2006 | Texas Lawyer

Brown v. Pacific Life Insurance Co.

The district court did not issue a 9 U.S.C. �3 stay and, furthermore, that the arbitration order is a final decision under Green Tree and 9 U.S.C. �16(a)(3).
7 minute read
February 10, 2003 | Texas Lawyer

Newsmakers

3 minute read