By Tom McParland | August 7, 2020
U.S. District Judge Jesse Furman of the Southern District of New York said he doubted that criminal trials would be able to resume in the district by mid-October, when the California lawyer was scheduled to stand trial for the second time in Manhattan federal court.
By Dan Clark | August 6, 2020
"The mission of the company and putting students first is very similar to my mission at my current job which is putting student-athletes first," Woodie Dixon Jr. said. "I really like the space and I think there is a lot of room to help students better run their lives."
By Alaina Lancaster | August 6, 2020
At least two patients at California's Patton State Hospital have died from coronavirus, according to a lawsuit filed by a team of Covington lawyers in San Francisco and counsel from Disability Rights California in Oakland.
By Frank Ready | August 5, 2020
"We are part of the business infrastructure and we are held by the same standards and rigor," Connie Brenton, chief of staff and senior director of legal operations at NetApp Inc. based in Sunnyvale, California. "And the expertise that we need now as an in-house associate in a legal department is half business and half legal," she said.
By Alaina Lancaster | August 5, 2020
"It's becoming more and more obvious that we're dealing with institutions that really don't seem to care," said U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria. "They don't actually care about the thing they should be caring about, which is avoiding the spread of the virus."
By Amanda Bronstad | August 5, 2020
In its first orders related to the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation refused on Wednesday to coordinate cases brought against banks over their handling of COVID-19 relief loans to small businesses, citing the small number of cases and varied experiences of the plaintiff applicants.
By Karen Sloan | August 5, 2020
At least a sixth of all American Bar Association-accredited law schools plan to be fully online in the fall, including some schools that announced plans to offer a hybrid of in-person and online classes earlier in the summer.
By Karen Sloan | July 30, 2020
The Law School Admission Council says it has fixed a glitch that caused the answers of about 140 July LSAT takers to go missing.
By Karen Sloan | July 30, 2020
A growing number of states including California have opted for an abbreviated online bar exam. But about half of the U.S. jurisdictions already administered in-person bar exams this week. And at least one, Colorado, has reported that a test taker later tested positive for COVID-19.
By Karen Sloan | July 29, 2020
Test takers and bar watchers have expressed skepticism that Michigan's exam was actually the victim of a cyberattack, speculating that the issue may have been the result of a poorly designed testing system that was overwhelmed at a critical moment.
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