Morning Docket

Morning Docket: 05.07.19

* Can the outrage of strip searching a 4-year-old get the Supreme Court to rethink qualified immunity? Well, killing and torturing people hasn't done it so it's not clear why this would. [National Law Journal] * Clifford Chance is the latest firm to deliver a bodyblow to the billable hour. [Law.com] * Dahlia Lithwick lays out a case that Democrats can focus on impeaching Trump and winning in 2020 too that elides any attention to the ways that the former would likely significantly undermine the latter. [Slate] * Pepe's Revenge: The artist behind the cartoon that's become the emblem of white supremacy is headed to trial to assert his rights over the image -- specifically the rights of racist groups to sell the image on their own posters. [Courthouse News Service] * A look back at Ted Bundy's trial skills. [Esquire] * Jurors asked if schools can be "willfully ignorant" of recruiting violations. It's probably fair to point out that most are "willfully aware." [Law360] * Deloitte joins fellow accounting firms in dipping its toe into the U.S. legal industry. [American Lawyer] * In-house attorney loses age discrimination suit. [Corporate Counsel]

* Can the outrage of strip searching a 4-year-old get the Supreme Court to rethink qualified immunity? Well, killing and torturing people hasn’t done it so it’s not clear why this would. [National Law Journal]

* Clifford Chance is the latest firm to deliver a bodyblow to the billable hour. [Law.com]

* Dahlia Lithwick lays out a case that Democrats can focus on impeaching Trump and winning in 2020 too that elides any attention to the ways that the former would likely significantly undermine the latter.
[Slate]

* Pepe’s Revenge: The artist behind the cartoon that’s become the emblem of white supremacy is headed to trial to assert his rights over the image — specifically the rights of racist groups to sell the image on their own posters. [Courthouse News Service]

* A look back at Ted Bundy’s trial skills. [Esquire]

* Jurors asked if schools can be “willfully ignorant” of recruiting violations. It’s probably fair to point out that most are “willfully aware.” [Law360]

* Deloitte joins fellow accounting firms in dipping its toe into the U.S. legal industry. [American Lawyer]

* In-house attorney loses age discrimination suit. [Corporate Counsel]