Connecticut Law Tribune | Live Coverage|News
By Robert Storace | September 1, 2021
A three-member lawyer panel heard claims for and against civil rights attorney Josephine Smalls Miller during a Wednesday hearing. That panel will make a recommendation within 60 days on whether the attorney should be reinstated to practice in state courts; a final decision will be made by a three-judge panel.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | August 27, 2021
Civil rights attorney Josephine Smalls Miller will make her case for reinstatement to the state bar on Sept. 1.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | August 26, 2021
"I think some of the jurisdictions involved and perhaps all of them will dig into this with investigatory zeal and will take it seriously," one legal ethics expert said.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | August 16, 2021
The Hartford firm of Cicchiello & Cicchiello has withdrawn a state lawsuit against a former law associate it accused of wrongly poaching clients from its firm to the attorney's new law firm.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | August 10, 2021
Hartford attorney Joseph Elder brought an appellate challenge for a reprimand over his IOLTA account.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | August 4, 2021
"It sends an extraordinarily important message that the federal courts are not just a soapbox to air baseless conspiracy theories harmful to our democratic system," said Kaplan Hecker & Fink partner Joshua Matz.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | July 16, 2021
"A law license does not confer unfounded prerogatives to file objectively, legally frivolous lawsuits, built on a copy-and-paste conspiracy theory derived largely from a pillow salesman, aimed at undermining a legitimate presidential election," Kaplan Hecker & Fink partner Joshua Matz said.
By Andrew Goudsward | June 23, 2021
Christopher Schroeder, a Duke University law professor, told the Senate Judiciary Committee that he would provide "impartial and independent" legal advice if confirmed.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | June 18, 2021
"Gross misconduct by members of the bar—be they private attorneys or the Attorney General of the United States—seriously stains the reputation of the legal profession with the general public, and also, no doubt, tempts other lawyers to skirt ethical boundaries," the attorneys wrote.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | June 9, 2021
Disciplinary counsel in D.C. said they generally do not "intervene in matters that are currently and publicly being discussed in the national political arena." One legal ethics expert said that explanation "seems dangerously overbroad."
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