Litigation Daily | Conversation
By Ross Todd | July 25, 2023
"I think there is some lesson here for the skeptical at times lawyers to just really keep it up and not give up," said Hartnett of her client Nakia Roy, who at times in his decades-long appeals represented himself pro se.
By Ross Todd | June 27, 2023
Over a six-week span in May and June, Halpern argued appeals in the Second, Fifth and Seventh Circuits as well as New York's Appellate Division, Second Department.
By Ross Todd | February 9, 2022
"What we've advocated since before the indictment is if you simply read the actual rule, the question of LIBOR must have an answer: There was no crime here and that's where our representation started and that's where we are at this point ending up," Seth Levine says.
By Ross Todd | October 13, 2021
Lawyers at Mayer Brown claim that last December former President Donald Trump commuted multiple life sentences their client, former hip hop mover and shaker James Rosemond, was serving. One big problem: Apparently no one informed the warden of the West Virginia prison where Rosemond is still imprisoned.
By Marie E. Lihotz and Marianne Espinosa | June 4, 2021
Enjoy this series of "please don'ts" from appellate judges, delivered under a promised cloak of anonymity.
By Angela Morris | December 22, 2020
The judge, who is Black, will bring diversity to the court where all current jurists are white.
By Jonathan Ringel | September 24, 2020
The full U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit will rehear a case in which a trial court judge removed a juror who said information from "My Father in Heaven" led to him to state at the outset of deliberations that a former member of Congress was not guilty on a host of corruption counts.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | September 14, 2020
Judge Amul Thapar wrote that "despite our binding holding, the district judge refused to follow the law and impose an appropriate sentence."
By Jenna Greene | January 30, 2020
The problem wasn't just that ex-FBI profiler Mark Safarik testified about crime scene analysis in the murder of Kathleen King. It's that he also weighed in on issues outside his supposed expertise. as well as those where no experts were needed.
By Jenna Greene | January 12, 2020
The story is a reminder of the power lawyers wield—for both good and ill—in administering justice.
Presented by BigVoodoo
Law firms & in-house legal departments with a presence in the middle east celebrate outstanding achievement within the profession.
The premier educational and networking event for employee benefits brokers and agents.
The Legal Intelligencer honors lawyers leaving a mark on the legal community in Pennsylvania and Delaware.
A large and well-established Tampa company is seeking a contracts administrator to support the company's in-house attorney and manage a wide...
We are seeking an attorney to join our commercial finance practice in either our Stamford, Hartford or New Haven offices. Candidates should ...
We are seeking an attorney to join our corporate and transactional practice. Candidates should have a minimum of 8 years of general corporat...
MELICK & PORTER, LLP PROMOTES CONNECTICUT PARTNERS HOLLY ROGERS, STEVEN BANKS, and ALEXANDER AHRENS