By Christine Charnosky | June 29, 2023
"In the market for legal talent, major American law firms are clamoring for diversity, for a variety of good reasons, but also because their Fortune 500 clients are demanding that their cases be staffed with attorneys from diverse backgrounds," said Kevin K. Washburn, N. William Hines dean and professor of law at the University of Iowa College of Law. "This market demand remains strong, [so] law schools will find lawful ways to meet that demand."
By Jimmy Hoover | June 26, 2023
The justices agreed to consider whether shareholders can owe income tax when no dividend, distribution or other payment has been received.
By Brad Kutner | June 8, 2023
"You really have to be amusing" to get parody protection under trademark law, said Knobbe Martens partner Jeff Van Hoosear.
By Jimmy Hoover | May 12, 2023
Supreme Court's decision brings little clarity to dormant commerce clause jurisprudence.
By Brad Kutner | April 17, 2023
"Requiring the disclosure to be applicable to everything just makes more sense," Michelman & Robinson partner Megan J. Penick said.
By Jack Morse and Neil Bautista | March 23, 2023
Oppenheimer Investigations Group's Jack Morse and Neil Bautista say it may have been more beneficial for the U.S. Supreme Court to have utilized a third-party investigator after the Dobbs draft opinion leak to avoid bias, or the appearance of it.
By Avalon Zoppo | March 21, 2023
Circuit courts are split on the issue. Six circuits have held that interlocutory appeals in this area trigger mandatory stays, while the Ninth, Second and Fifth have their own tests.
By Mason Lawlor | March 20, 2023
Amazon employees were unable to find success on appeal for claims that they were not compensated for time spent in the company's security screenings, as the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that the screenings were not "integral and indispensable" to the employees' principal work activities.
By Brad Kutner | February 22, 2023
The justices issued decisions on wages and hours, bankruptcy and a criminal appeal from a capital case.
By Brad Kutner | February 22, 2023
"If this were a criminal case I think it's clear there wouldn't be aiding and abetting liability. [It] requires the intention of causing a crime to be committed and that's not alleged here," said Justice Samuel Alito.
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