By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | July 15, 2020
Stephen Susman, the founder of Houston trial firm Susman Godfrey, died on Tuesday from complications from a bicycle accident in April.
By Ellen Bardash | July 15, 2020
The court's community relations chief said the largest backlogs of cases developed over the past several months in the courts that regularly see higher volumes of cases, including the Justice of the Peace Court, which kept three courts open to the public 24 hours a day, with restrictions, throughout the judicial state of emergency.
By Suzette Parmley | July 15, 2020
The state's in-person exam that was scheduled for Sept. 9-10 and had attracted some 2,000 applicants, now will be administered remotely by the New Jersey Board of Bar Examiners on Oct. 5-6, according to the order signed by Chief Justice Stuart Rabner.
By Karen Sloan | July 15, 2020
A new survey by the National Association for Law Placement found that half of law firms have yet to set start dates for their new associate classes, in part due to uncertainty over when the bar exam will be given.
By Karen Sloan | July 15, 2020
Louisiana had planned to give a one-day bar exam both in person and online July 27, but announced the cancellation of both tests with just 12 days' notice.
By Frank Ready | July 15, 2020
Employees using their own laptops or other devices when working from home may be necessary at the moment, but companies and legal departments may be looking for ways to minimize the rapidly expanding risk surface involved.
By Raychel Lean | July 15, 2020
It's a case that highlights the plethora of new predicaments that COVID-19 puts judges, litigators and clients in as they try to navigate a new normal.
By Karen Sloan | July 15, 2020
Legal educators were left reeling by a now-rescinded directive that would have required international students to attend at least one in-person class this fall. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement changed course Tuesday after a number of universities sued.
By C. Ryan Barber | July 15, 2020
"Our practices have remained busy, even into the pandemic. So we've got a lot of matters still chugging along, but it's definitely been different kinds of work," James Garland, co-leader of Covington's white-collar practice, says.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael Slocum and Ryan O'Connor | July 15, 2020
Rules, considerations and potential pitfalls for employers who permit employees to work from home.
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