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June 04, 2009 |

Nahmias gets high-profile support for seat

As today's deadline approaches, the commission that will help the governor pick a replacement for Leah Ward Sears on the Supreme Court of Georgia has received the names of at least 33 lawyers and judges for its consideration.Correspondence flooding into the office of Michael J. Bowers, who chairs the Judicial Nominating Commission, includes a veritable campaign for David E.
7 minute read
December 29, 2006 |

A Trial Lawyer by Any Other Name ...

Following in the footsteps of the Association of Trial Lawyers of America's recent renaming, the new business cards for Atlanta-based plaintiffs firm Warshauer Thornton & Easom will identify its lawyers as "civil justice attorneys." The new moniker "better defines what we do," according to managing partner Michael J. Warshauer, who says the public's perception of the profession would improve if other plaintiffs lawyers followed suit.
2 minute read
July 08, 2004 |

Lord, Bissell Elects First Black Female Chief in Atlanta

Meredith [email protected], Bissell Brook has elected Corliss Scroggins Lawson partner-in-charge of the firm's Atlanta office. She becomes the first African-American woman to head the Atlanta office of a major firm.Lawson succeeds Michael J. Athans, who left in April to form Fields, Howell, Athans McLaughlin.
6 minute read
June 20, 2006 |

Some lawyers leave civilian life for Iraq

TEN DAYS AFTER Haynes and Boone partner Andrew Fono learned he was called to active duty, he turned his environmental litigation docket over to his partners, packed up his office in Houston and prepared for pre-deployment training.Fono, a judge advocate in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserves, doesn't know exactly when the battalion he is training with will be sent to Iraq, although he says it will be in late summer or early fall.
10 minute read
March 16, 2000 |

Federal Judge Orders County to Fix 'Disgraceful' Jail

Calling conditions at the Fulton County, Ga. Jail "disgraceful and totally unacceptable," U.S. District Senior Judge Marvin H. Shoob ordered authorities to correct "gross inadequacies of medical care." Shoob found the county violated a settlement agreement with the jail's HIV-positive inmates, six of whom initiated a class-action suit last year. The inmates claimed medical treatment for those in the county jail, particularly HIV-positive prisoners, was gravely inadequate.
7 minute read
March 30, 2005 |

Georgia Insurers Facing Greater Liability

The Georgia Supreme Court ruled Monday that a state law governing uninsured motorist coverage requires an insurance company to pay damages for the death, caused by an uninsured driver, of a customer's son -- even if the son was not covered under the father's policy. The decision is "a pretty significant expansion of liability" for insurance companies, said insurance defense attorney Hall F. McKinley III. "Clearly it broadens the types of claims that can be brought."
4 minute read
May 12, 2008 |

Sports Agent Work Is a Long Shot for Lawyers

Although a sports agent's work can touch on everything from contracts to criminal procedure, the handful of Atlanta lawyers in the business say it's difficult for practicing attorneys to break into the cutthroat field. The recent experiences of three Atlanta attorneys who have attempted to generate new practices as sports agents show how tricky the business can be.
9 minute read
December 14, 1999 |

Georgia Inmates to Settle Suit on AIDS Treatment

HIV-positive inmates claiming they were denied critical medications by the Fulton County, Ga. Jail agreed to settle their suit against the county and a medical contractor, attorneys say. The deal comes four months after a court-appointed doctor reported the jail's medical clinic did not stock some commonly-prescribed anti-AIDS drugs. The doctor also supported the plaintiffs' complaint that some jail doctors were "disinterested in and not proficient in the care of HIV-infected persons."
4 minute read
August 04, 2009 |

For Want of a Fax: Insurer, Agency Hit With $1 Million Jury Verdict

A tangled case stemming from what the plaintiff's attorney called an insurance agency's "simple failure to send a fax or e-mail" has cost the agency, along with the insurance company whose policy it sold, more than $1 million, including $400,000 in attorney fees. An attorney for Pacific Insurance Co. said it will appeal the $881,000 portion of the judgment it was ordered to pay to the plaintiff, Regency Savings Bank.
4 minute read
October 13, 1999 |

Georgia Senator Concerned With Settlement Deals

A Georgia state senator who wrote the law on selling structured settlements says he can accept a judge's ruling on such a sale, but not the high interest rates. Sen. Michael S. Meyer von Bremen criticized the rates, that could hit nearly 20 percent, charged by the settlement buyer in a case last week before a Fulton superior court judge. The judge found that two people who accepted structured settlements in personal injury suits could assign the payments to another company in exchange for a lump sum.
4 minute read

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