By Katheryn Hayes Tucker | June 7, 2022
Lead defense attorney was Eugene Stearns of South Florida, who remembers the trial as a "superspreader" that ended with many of his team members getting COVID-19.
By Katheryn Hayes Tucker | June 6, 2022
Circuit Judge Britt Grant's opinion underscored the dire record of business owners seeking coverage for losses attributed to COVID-19. She said policies weren't written with foresight of a once-in-a-century pandemic.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Liza Vertinsky and Yaniv Heled, Georgia State University | June 3, 2022
Every so often stories of genetic theft, or extreme precautions taken to avoid it, make headline news. So it was with a picture of French President…
By Zack Needles | Alaina Lancaster | June 3, 2022
For Legal Speak's 200th episode, Mayer Brown Chair Jon Van Gorp shares how podcasting has helped keep his firm connected and its culture intact during the pandemic. Plus, some familiar voices join to celebrate the milestone.
By Marianna Wharry | June 1, 2022
"No Maryland appellate court has decided this specific question, but hundreds of courts throughout the United States have decided it in interpreting policies that are substantially identical to the policy in this case," Judge Kevin F. Arthur wrote.
By Avalon Zoppo | June 1, 2022
U.S. District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle issued a nationwide injunction in April halting the CDC's mask mandate on airplanes, buses and trains.
By Everett Catts | May 31, 2022
"I think you need to be careful to design perks that are really beneficial to the employee and not a burden on them, having to just break [remote work] and attend this event," said John E. Hall Jr., founding partner at Hall Booth Smith.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Andrew Maloney | May 27, 2022
While several law firms are paying remote hires on the same scale as others, any economic downturn could quickly shift the dynamics.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Hayley Strong Hall and Renee E. Salley | May 26, 2022
The temporary solution came in the form of an executive order issued by Gov. Brian Kemp on April 9, 2020, which suspended the physical presence requirement and allowed remote witnessing and notarization of various documents using real-time audio-video communication technology.
By Phillip Bantz | May 24, 2022
"Have we sunk this low as a society? Where we can't even tolerate the presence of someone who dares to have a different feeling?"
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