The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Todd W. Nothstein | April 17, 2023
The challenge in representing a custody litigant with disabilities lies in understanding and countering what many think they know when they see a person with disabilities caring for a child.
By Allison Dunn | April 10, 2023
"Very few organizations can commit the time and resources to litigating these cases for the long haul to ensure the outcome and that the First Amendment's respected and that the court does the proper analysis. It's been a long time," one of the pro bono attorneys on the case, Caesar D. Kalinowski IV, an associate at Davis Wright Tremaine, told Law.com.
By Dan Roe | April 7, 2023
With less than half of its 2018 head count, Boies Schiller is running lean and sitting on a pile of lucrative cases.
By Stephanie Wilkins | April 6, 2023
"Legal innovation means a willingness to break the status quo, to see failure as success in progress, and to reimagine the way law can be practiced in a new light, and from a completely new angle," says Joanna P. Boisen, Chief Pro Bono & Social Impact Officer at Davis Wright Tremaine.
By Avalon Zoppo | April 3, 2023
The complaint alleges that during Charles Mack's breaks at the prison commissary, the guards would make noises, kick boxes and talk loudly when Mack, a Muslim, tried to perform his prayers.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | March 31, 2023
Though The Satanic Temple is a new client for Dechert, the firm's co-counsel is familiar, Dechert associate Noah Becker said.
By Lisa Willis | March 20, 2023
Fewer cases are going to trial, attorneys said, leaving a gap for young lawyers seeking courtroom experience.
By The Legal Intelligencer | March 17, 2023
In this month's calendar, join HIAS Pennsylvania for a new volunteer information session, an awards ceremony and more.
By Charles Toutant | March 16, 2023
"The mere appointment of counsel is not the standard in providing effective counsel and certainly can be characterized as a sham and nothing more than a formal compliance with the Constitution's requirement that an accused be given the assistance of counsel," the New Jersey State Bar Association said in an amicus curiae brief.
National Law Journal | News|Q&A
By Avalon Zoppo | March 16, 2023
"The idea that we could simplify this in a brief introductory paragraph and help that person understand the bottom line of the decision was really appealing to me," said Judge Charlotte Sweeney.
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