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New Litigation Partners Discuss Tackling Tricky Assignments and Dealing With Imposter Syndrome
Newly promoted litigation partners in the second half of the Am Law 100 reflect on their career paths and offer up some advice.California's Latest Trailblazing Privacy Rules Getting Criticized From Every Direction
"It will essentially break the internet" if consumers' rights to opt out of website advertising are too sweeping, said Rick Armey, who co-wrote the legislation creating the California Privacy Protection Agency.Law Firm Data Breach Reports Show No Signs of Slowing in 2024
Taft Stettinius is among 21 law firms to report data breaches this year.Judicial Ethics Opinion 23-125
A part-time lawyer judge is disqualified, subject to remittal, in all matters involving an attorney who is employed by the judge's client as in-house counsel and operations manager and serves as the judge's primary client contact.View more book results for the query "*"
Decision of the Day: Times Square Hotel Not Liable for Guest's Suicide Death, Had No Duty of Care
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.Ex-Maryland Judge Files Federal Complaint After Removal From Office
The Maryland Supreme Court took the extremely rare step of removing Judge Ademiluyi from office "based on the egregious nature of the misconduct in this case," the court said in its order. Ademiluyi has filed a federal lawsuit against her former colleagues alleging retaliation.Senators Urge DOJ, FTC to Investigate Formula 1's Exclusion of Andretti-Cadillac
"It is possible that such a refusal to deal—especially if orchestrated through a group boycott—could violate U.S. antitrust laws," the senators wrote.A Cautionary Tale: EPA Lists PFOA and PFOS as Hazardous Substances
"The EPA's new PFAS rule is the agency's first-ever exercise of its authority under Section 102(a) to directly identify CERCLA-specific hazardous substances," write Andrea Driggs, Meredith Weinberg and Benjamin Longbottom of Perkins Coie.UCLA Chancellor Averts Censure, No-Confidence Vote
The Academic Senate voted 43% in favor of the no-confidence resolution and voted 50% in favor of censuring Chancellor Gene Block.