By Katheryn Hayes Tucker | June 6, 2022
"I've learned from years of trial work, the person with the simplest case wins," said Richard Robbins of the Robbins Firm. "Ask me at a party what is the case about, and if I can't tell you in a minute, I have a problem."
By Michael A. Mora | April 4, 2022
"They don't call it the 'Signature Bridge' for nothing," said Stuart Sobel, a shareholder at Siegfried Rivera. "It's going to change the look of downtown forever."
By Tom McParland | March 8, 2022
U.S. District Judge Lewis J. Liman rejected claims by a group of developers who said that the firm, Gamma Real Estate Capital, leveraged an $82 million bridge loan to seize control of the $550 million property.
By Cedra Mayfield | March 7, 2022
"A most fundamental obligation of lawyers worldwide is the duty to protect client confidences and, a fortiori, not to deploy a client's confidential information against that client," read a motion for disqualification drafted by Poole Huffman trial attorney Luke Andrews of Tucker.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Andrew Larson | February 15, 2022
A $73 million settlement to a seven-year legal battle against the maker of the semi-automatic rifle used in the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre…
By Cedra Mayfield | February 10, 2022
"It was only about an hour and a half to two hours, where they had to actually be present and answer questions," said attorney Milinda Brown of Buckley Beal in Atlanta. "Before, it could take all day."
By Jacob Polacheck | January 25, 2022
The Owen Gleaton, Egan, Jones & Sweeney firm is winding down, while Stites & Harbison now has 28 lawyers in Atlanta.
By Krishnan Nair | January 10, 2022
In a case that has divided opinion across the globe, the world tennis number one will now be allowed to leave immigration detention. But his fight isn't over.
By Charles Toutant | September 20, 2021
"In our world, once a bad opinion comes out, the copycat attorneys come out nationally," said John Lynch of Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders in Virginia Beach, Virginia, who represents defendants in Fair Debt Collection Practices Act suits.
By Greg Land | September 1, 2021
Pulte Homes sued 18 insurance companies for subcontractors that worked on the Aldredge Brookhaven project in an effort to recoup over $15 million it claims to have spent fixing allegedly shoddy construction work.
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