By Ellen Bardash | August 5, 2020
Under the new order, Delaware's state courts will remain in Phase 2, in which some court proceedings are being held in person and many are being held with one or more parties appearing virtually, of their four-phase reopening plan.
By Ellen Bardash | July 29, 2020
Of the 725 specific categories into which businesses receiving PPP loans were grouped, law offices received more individual loans in Delaware than all but seven, according to data recently released by the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Small Business Administration.
By Vanessa Blum | Zack Needles | July 24, 2020
From cancelled bar exams to deferred start dates, new and aspiring attorneys are being forced to regroup amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
By Ellen Bardash | July 24, 2020
Of specific concern, Chief Justice Collins J. Seitz Jr. noted, was the fact that almost 60% of those scheduled to sit for the bar exam would be traveling from other states to do so, with some coming from areas designated as COVID-19 hot spots or subject to quarantine restrictions in their home states.
By Ellen Bardash | July 22, 2020
A long-awaited intellectual property case involving the energy company Sunoco was one of the matters to be postponed indefinitely, as Chief Judge Leonard Stark said the continued bar on jury trials would be extended through the end of August as a safety precaution.
By David Thomas | Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | Christine Simmons | July 22, 2020
Milbank, Haynes and Boone and other big firms are adjusting to the evolving news about bar exams. Many firms are playing it by ear.
By Samantha Stokes | July 22, 2020
Lowenstein, Cozen O'Conner and some others have reversed at least some of their compensation cuts, with some citing stronger-than-expected demand.
By Ellen Bardash | July 15, 2020
The court's community relations chief said the largest backlogs of cases developed over the past several months in the courts that regularly see higher volumes of cases, including the Justice of the Peace Court, which kept three courts open to the public 24 hours a day, with restrictions, throughout the judicial state of emergency.
By Ellen Bardash | July 8, 2020
All those present during the exam are expected to wear masks covering their mouths and noses and have their temperatures taken and be asked health questions at the door each day of the exam.
By Karen Sloan | June 23, 2020
Harvard Law School should not charge $65,875 for remote classes, an incoming 2L argues in a new lawsuit against the university.
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