By Angela Morris | November 18, 2020
While the criminal accusations against Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton are serious and warrant an investigation, criminal law experts cautioned that prosecuting Paxton would not be a slam dunk.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Andrew Maloney | November 18, 2020
Law firms were already feeling pressure to rethink their approach to partner compensation, but the current crisis has forced them to reach deeper into the toolbox for solutions.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | November 16, 2020
As firms prepare for a shift in work, they are adding lawyers with varied experience in the energy sector, such as Paul Hastings, which recently hired two Baker Botts partners in San Francisco.
By Zack Needles | November 15, 2020
It looks like Donald Trump's presidency could be ending the same way it began: kicking up controversy for the law firms that represent him and his interests, and raising broader philosophical questions about the perils of taking on divisive clients and cases. But while Trump wasn't the first, won't be the last and is far from the only current client with a spotty public image, he is emblematic of a new kind of reputational risk that could potentially cause more severe problems for law firms than a mere PR headache.
Daily Business Review | Analysis
By Dan Roe | November 13, 2020
Ravicher has not been terminated or removed from his startup law courses, the university said in a statement.
By Victoria Hudgins | November 13, 2020
As some law firms struggle to revoke private data access from ex-employees, their cybersecurity challenges are only growing as they embrace remote working.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Andrew Maloney | November 12, 2020
"I think the expectation generally is that Rip Van Winkle wakes up, and we see a much different environment," Dechert's David Kelley said.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Ross Todd | November 11, 2020
Jones Day on Tuesday sought to clarify that it hasn't made allegations of voter fraud on behalf of President Trump or any party affiliated with him.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Jacqueline Thomsen | November 10, 2020
"Simply by keeping litigation ongoing, a sore loser candidate or party could dramatically undermine the transition efforts of the winning candidate by indefinitely postponing the declaration of a president-elect under the act," a 2001 law review article warned.
By Lawrence L. Bell | November 9, 2020
The election of Joe Biden as President may clear the way for many changes in the retirement planning landscape.
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