Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Andrew Larson | January 20, 2022
"Regulators are unable to ferret out the bad actors in the profession if they are engaged in repeated back-and-forth communications with attorneys who take an 'ostrich with its head in the sand' or passive-aggressive approach to the audit process," Judge James Wilson Abrams wrote in one case.
By Andrew Goudsward | January 20, 2022
U.S. District Judge James Boasberg rejected Facebook's arguments that FTC Chair Lina Khan's role in the Facebook litigation was improper.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | December 28, 2021
Some lawyers have been referred for disciplinary proceedings and are facing defamation lawsuits. Others have been ordered to pay legal costs. Many have not faced any public referral or discipline.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Commentary
By Mark Dubois | December 22, 2021
Lawyers are a creative bunch, and when they set out to do good, they can achieve wonderful things, but when they drift off the line, there's no end to the madness.
By Mark Dubois | December 15, 2021
What is your role when you think your client is nuts?
By Jacqueline Thomsen | December 6, 2021
U.S. District Judge Brett Ludwig said Trump "may have had far from noble intentions in filing this lawsuit," but that attorneys waited too long to seek sanctions in the case.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | December 2, 2021
U.S. District Judge Linda Parker said the amount ordered to be paid to the Detroit attorneys "is an amount the court finds needed to deter plaintiffs' counsel and others from engaging in similar misconduct in the future."
By Amanda Bronstad | November 29, 2021
In a motion filed Nov. 26, Edelson accused co-lead class counsel Katrina Carroll of threatening the firm to drop its objection to the $92 million privacy settlement with TikTok.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Mark Dubois | November 19, 2021
The plaintiffs claim that the rule "deprives attorneys of the ability to discern what speech and conduct is proscribed, and they thus cannot know for sure in advance how to conform their conduct to the terms of the rule … [and] grants enforcement personnel too much discretion to decide what speech is sanctionable and what speech is not."
By Allison Dunn | November 15, 2021
"They're seeming to forget that they're judges 24/7 and their robe not only entitles them to the authority, but it's symbolic to the public," said Miami School of Law social media and ethics professor Jan Jacobowitz.
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