By Ross Todd | May 4, 2020
"The conditions now prevailing in the Tenderloin constitute a violation of the fundamental civil rights of those residing and working there," wrote lawyers for Tenderloin residents suing to force the city to confront encampments and drug-dealing on neighborhood sidewalks.
By Cheryl Miller | May 4, 2020
"Everybody recognizes that everybody's got a role and responsibility to play and that it's all interconnected—we all got a crash course in the zen of how we are all tied together in things," Martin Hoshino, administrative director of the Judicial Council, tells The Recorder in a wide-ranging Q&A.
By Alaina Lancaster | May 1, 2020
San Francisco Superior Judge Ethan Schulman denied a motion that would have reclassified Lyft drivers as employees, so that they can reap the state's paid sick leave, agreeing with a federal judge who found that such a ruling would jeopardize drivers' access to federal coronavirus relief.
By Alaina Lancaster | April 30, 2020
Access to all district locations will continue to be limited for at least another month.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Dan Packel | April 30, 2020
Many law firms have already stepped up in an effort to meet the needs of hard-pressed Americans, and Utah is expediting its efforts to improve its residents' ability to get legal help.
By Mike Scarcella | April 30, 2020
"Notwithstanding this dispute, Gilead will continue to work with federal agencies, including HHS and the CDC," Gilead, represented by a team from Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr, including former U.S. Attorney Ronald Machen Jr., said in announcing the new lawsuit.
By Karen Sloan | April 30, 2020
The Ad-Hoc Committee on Law Clerk Hiring, which includes Ninth Circuit Chief Judge Sidney Thomas, called on judges to modify hiring practices to limit exposure to the virus and circumvent travel issues for candidates.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Jay Harrington | April 30, 2020
As the demand for legal services lessens, supply will increase, leaving lawyers and law firms that lack strong positioning and differentiation struggling to overcome perceptions that they're offering nothing more than a commodity.
By Cheryl Miller | April 29, 2020
The extension is not a mandate. It allows delays but encourages lawyers to work together to proceed with criminal trials at a sooner date.
By Alaina Lancaster | April 29, 2020
Littler Mendelson's Natalie Pierce points to the new legal threats for an increasingly automated workforce after the coronavirus pandemic.
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