By Ross Todd | January 27, 2022
On the day the news of Justice Stephen Breyer's impending retirement from the U.S. Supreme Court broke, former clerks said his optimistic, consensus-building approach shaped them.
By Ross Todd | January 21, 2022
Less than a year after Steve Lehotsky, the former chief litigation counsel at the U.S. Chamber's Litigation Center, and Scott Keller, the former head of the Supreme Court practice at Baker Botts, came together to form their boutique Lehotsky Keller, they scored a monumental win for a coalition of 26 business associations.
By Ross Todd | August 20, 2021
Randy Mastro and Akiva Shapiro built on their prior U.S. Supreme Court win for the Diocese of Brooklyn striking down New York's capacity restrictions on religious services to secure another pandemic-related writ of injunction from the court for landlords challenging the state's eviction moratorium.
By Ross Todd | June 23, 2021
Stris & Maher's Tillman Breckenridge is a self-described "beat-the-drum proponent" of being judicious when it comes to filing amicus briefs. But a brief he filed on behalf of African American antitrust lawyers caught the attention of Justice Brett Kavanaugh in this week's blockbuster NCAA decision.
By Mike Scarcella | May 12, 2021
O'Melveny & Myers and Morrison & Foerster are among the firms seeking fees for advocacy in a long-running abortion rights case that went to the Supreme Court last term. Stanford's Jeff Fisher, the veteran Supreme Court practitioner, is among the lawyers whose work on the case was highlighted in a fee petition.
By Marcia Coyle | May 4, 2021
Responding to Roberts on Tuesday, DOJ's Eric Feigin said: "Well, your honor, I don't know that we have a specific set of procedures or guidelines that I could kind of publicly share."
By Scott Graham | May 3, 2021
For the third time in three years, the Supreme Court is asking the solicitor general whether it's time to revisit Section 101 of the Patent Act, this time in an automotive engineering case. Eligibility is one of the most controversial areas of patent law.
By Tony Mauro | April 19, 2021
Michael Luttig chats with the National Law Journal about redesigning a first amendment icon. He and his wife, Elizabeth, are underwriting the redesign and installation of the First Amendment tablet that previously adorned the Newseum in Washington, D.C.
By Gregory L. Curtner | April 12, 2021
Gregory L. Curtner, an antitrust litigator at Riley Safer Holmes & Cancila who has represented the National Collegiate Athletic Association in many matters, makes the case that courts are not designed to micromanage joint ventures like the NCAA under the guise of the antitrust laws.
By Gregory L. Curtner | March 18, 2021
Gregory L. Curtner, an antitrust litigator at Riley Safer Holmes & Cancila who has represented the NCAA in many matters, makes the case that amateurism should survive a potentially game-changing case at the U.S. Supreme Court.
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