By Mike Scarcella | July 7, 2020
Thousands of U.S. law firms, including three California firms directly affiliated with President Donald Trump, received at least $150,000, or millions of dollars in some cases, from the federal government's coronavirus loan program.
By Ross Todd | July 6, 2020
On Monday, after COVID-19 forced a three-and-a-half-month break in a federal criminal jury pending before U.S. District Judge William Alsup in San Francisco, 15 of the 16 original jurors and alternates showed up to resume proceedings.
By Dylan Jackson | July 6, 2020
At least 45 law firms in the Am Law 200 received SBA loans this year.
By Cheryl Miller | July 2, 2020
The deans said the justices gave no indication of which exam option they may favor. State Bar officials, however, appeared early in the meeting to be leaning in favor of an online exam in October, they said.
By Samantha Stokes | July 2, 2020
Four recent hires shared with us the ups and downs of integrating virtually into their new law firms.
By Matt Wickersham | June 30, 2020
Although lawsuits are a certainty, liability is not. Any lawsuit seeking damages for COVID-19 injuries must surmount several procedural and substantive legal hurdles, says Alston & Bird's Matt Wickersham.
By Karen Sloan | June 30, 2020
A national surge in COVID-19 cases, recent protests over racial injustice, and the challenges of social distancing are prompting a growing number of state supreme courts to rethink plans to hold in-person bar exams in July and September.
By Stephen M. Duvernay and Brandon V. Stracener | June 29, 2020
"Ordinarily we would defend a citizen's right to engage in self-destructive behavior. But this is about more than any one person—defying the mask order is bad for everyone," write Stephen M. Duvernay and Brandon V. Stracener of the California Constitution Center at Berkeley Law.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Zach Abramowitz | June 28, 2020
Unless law firms figure out an elegant solution to billing clients that does not involve the billable hour a "get the job done" mentality cannot exist, almost by design, Zach Abramowitz notes in warning of the dangers of the industry moving remote.
By Alaina Lancaster | June 26, 2020
Dowling & Marquez in San Francisco is representing real estate investors who claim the sidewalks in the neighborhood during the COVID-19 outbreak have become "unsanitary, unsafe and often impassable."
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