By Angela Morris | November 14, 2019
A promise to be civil in the new-lawyer oath may be a good starting point, but stakeholders and observers recognize the oath is not enough to stem the ongoing problem of lawyers behaving badly.
By Xiumei Dong | November 14, 2019
Demand for legal services in California continued to pick up into the third quarter, fueling strong revenue growth, according to Citi's latest survey.
By Sue Reisinger | November 14, 2019
Parker, who served as interim CEO and lost his bid to make it permanent, is leaving the company March 31 "to pursue other business opportunities," the company said Thursday.
By Xiumei Dong | November 13, 2019
Patricia Stanton, the head of Baker Botts' San Francisco office, said local lateral recruits are paying more and more attention to the firm's pitch.
By Scott Graham | November 13, 2019
The Federal Circuit says a jury should have evaluated the competing designs, even if a primary difference was one company's logo. But the appellate court sidestepped a damages question left open by the Supreme Court's Samsung v. Apple ruling.
By Dan Clark | November 13, 2019
Craig Carpenter, the CEO of X1, a data search tool that can be used for e-discovery and to track data, spoke to Corporate Counsel about how X1 is being used in the wake of CCPA and GDPR and skills GCs who hope to move to the C-suite should have.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | November 13, 2019
Connecticut law school student Cameron Atkinson has sued Facebook, alleging the social media giant censored him by deleting his posts naming the alleged Trump-Ukrainian whistleblower.
By Cheryl Miller | November 13, 2019
A 19-page report prepared by Nielsen Merksamer Parrinello Gross & Leoni found that a bar staffer, pressured to finish work before having to proctor the two-day exam in July, mistakenly included a list of topics in an email inviting 16 law school deans to observe a test grading session later that summer.
By Cheryl Miller | November 12, 2019
"AB 5 has implications that go beyond employment classification in California," Ogletree Deakins partner Robert Roginson said in a statement.
By Ross Todd | November 12, 2019
"You can't build a wall without Congress, that's absolutely clear," said Douglas Letter, the top lawyer for the U.S. House of Representatives, arguing Tuesday as an amicus backing the plaintiffs.
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