By Jeff Martin | September 22, 2017
A website is tricking people into thinking they're dealing with Delta Air Lines when arranging for their pets to fly on jets, the Atlanta-based company maintains in a new federal lawsuit.
By Jenna Greene | September 19, 2017
Litigation can be a nasty business—but the very best lawyers are those who can win cases without being jerks. That's the central premise of the American College of Trial Lawyers, which just inducted its newest members.
By dailyreportonline | Daily Report | September 19, 2017
While the national group's internal survey claims that Georgia supposedly has declined as a hospitable legal environment and thus presents an inhospitable business climate, the actual numbers paint a very different picture.
By Katheryn Hayes Tucker | September 18, 2017
The Georgia Supreme Court's Chief Justice's Commission on Professionalism has named a new executive director: attorney Karlise Yvette Grier.
By Katheryn Hayes Tucker | September 18, 2017
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce Institute for Legal Reform sent out a scathing review Monday of Georgia as a litigation venue.
By Sue Reisinger | September 15, 2017
Victoria Webster took a courtroom defeat and turned it into an award-winning article.
By Katelyn Polantz | September 14, 2017
Sean Marotta, a senior appellate associate at Hogan Lovells in Washington, D.C., had coffee with 15 summer associates this year who found him over Twitter. The National Law Journal caught up with Marotta to review some of what he learned from them.
By Celia Ampel | September 11, 2017
The auto body shops allege the insurance companies steer policyholders away from shops that charge higher rates.
By Sarah Rathke | September 7, 2017
On Aug. 8, Judge Shira Scheindlin published an op-ed in The New York Times discussing the statistical truth that law firms have poor representation of women attorneys as first-chair trial lawyers. Titled, "Female Lawyers Can Talk, Too," Judge Scheindlin's piece observed that progress at private law firms has stalled. Backed by data collected by the New York State Bar Association, Scheindlin's observation is not merely anecdotal.
By Marcia Coyle | September 6, 2017
The federal judiciary's fee-based access to its public online database, known as PACER, is not just anachronistic and counter to history but harms the structural integrity of the modern judiciary, a new research article claims.
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