Litigation Daily | Best Practices
By Ross Todd | October 18, 2021
We offered five public relations professionals the opportunity to speak anonymously so they could give litigators their candid feedback about how well they deal with the media. Here's what they had to say.
By Ross Todd | June 21, 2021
Michael Bowe and Lauren Tabaksblat, who joined the firm last year, filed suit last week on behalf of 34 plaintiffs who claim that Pornhub's parent company created "a bustling marketplace for child pornography, rape videos, trafficked videos, and every other form of nonconsensual content."
By Ross Todd | June 16, 2021
If Hollywood litigator Stanton "Larry" Stein and in-house media lawyer Daniel Novack can get along, perhaps it's a lesson to all of us.
By Ross Todd | March 23, 2021
"Let people watch the process, because they will trust it more if they can see it," says Ballard Spahr partner Leita Walker, who has represented a coalition of media outlets covering the trial of the former police officer charged in George Floyd's death.
By Mike Scarcella | September 28, 2020
In an 18-page opinion, U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols found that TikTok, represented by a team from Covington & Burling, was likely to prevail in arguing that the Trump administration had overstepped in pushing to prevent future downloads of the app.
By Anna Zhang | September 21, 2020
The plaintiffs have shown serious questions going to the merits of the First Amendment claim, U.S. Magistrate Judge Laurel Beeler in San Francisco ruled.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | July 8, 2020
"I'm really unpersuaded by your argument about manipulation here," U.S. District Judge Randolph Moss told a DOJ attorney. "I'm baffled by it, given what the department has done here."
By Nate Robson | June 16, 2020
"This is a civil action by the United States to prevent Defendant John R. Bolton, a former National Security Advisor, from compromising national security by publishing a book containing classified information," the Justice Department said in its complaint Tuesday in Washington.
By Raychel Lean | January 13, 2020
Harvard Law School professor Lawrence Lessig claimed the New York Times defamed him for clicks.
By Ross Todd | October 17, 2019
"Everything about this case turns out to be stupid," said U.S. Magistrate Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley at a hearing Thursday on journalist Ryan Mac's attempt to quash subpoenas seeking his testimony in a British cave diver's defamation lawsuit against tech CEO Elon Musk.
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