Recent Headlines from Above the Law
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Law Schools
Civil Rights Are About More Than Liberation
A deep dive into the history of Black civil rights. -
Law Schools
T14 Law School Is One Of First To Set Guidelines For Student Use Of ChatGPT
The elite school is allowing some but not all possible student uses of the AI technology. -
Law Schools
T14 Law School Removes Racist Benefactor's Name From Building
Prestigious law schools are starting to question the legacies of their donors. -
Law Schools
Come Watch Me Lose At Berkeley Law
A free speech debate between First Amendment expert, Ken White, and, like, me. -
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Law Schools
Berkeley Law School Dumps 'Boalt Hall' Name Over The Whole 'Virulent Racism' Thing
Dean Chemerinsky is pulling the plug on the troubling name. -
Morning Docket
Morning Docket: 09.17.18
* Sexual misconduct allegations against Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh were recently brought to light and while he may be spending his time “hoping and praying” before the vote, his supporters say it’s highly likely he’ll be confirmed anyway. [Big Law Business]
* Well, except for the fact that senators are calling for the delay of Kavanaugh’s confirmation vote now that his accuser has come forward to reveal the details of the judge’s alleged attack on her when they were students in high school. [NBC News]
* And was Judge Kavanaugh a member of Judge Alex Kozinski’s sexually explicit “Easy Rider Gag List”? Kavanaugh says he doesn’t remember receiving any of those emails, but Heidi Bond, one of Kozinski’s former law clerks, thinks that there could be a very easy way to find out if the would-be SCOTUS justice is lying. [Slate]
* The most controversial Biglaw firm? Federal prosecutors are considering bringing charges against former Skadden partner Greg Craig and taking action against the firm itself in a probe related to Paul Manafort. Will the prestigious Biglaw firm wind up with a civil settlement or a deferred prosecution agreement? [CNN]
* Shearman & Sterling has announced that the firm will soon bring Sandra Bang, its first-ever chief diversity and talent strategy officer, into its C-suite. She’ll be leading a new global task force aimed at increasing diversity at the Wall Street firm. Congratulations! Perhaps additional firms will follow their lead. [American Lawyer]
* The body of Brian Lewinstein, the rising second-year student at Berkeley Law who crossed a safety line and fell while trying to get a picture of Toketee Falls from above, has been found. More than a month had passed since the accident occurred. Our sincere condolences go out to all of his family and friends. [SFGate]
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Law Schools
Berkeley Law School Is On Its Way To Purging 'Boalt' References
A law school by any other name would smell as prestigious... -
Morning Docket
Morning Docket: 09.12.18
* Law schools in North and South Carolina have canceled classes for the foreseeable future so that students, faculty, and staff can evacuate the area and hunker down before Hurricane Florence arrives. Please be careful and stay safe, everyone. [Law.com]
* President Trump is eager to choose Emmet Flood to succeed Don McGahn as the next White House counsel. Ty Cobb, one of Trump’s former lawyers, is in Flood’s camp because he’s “battled investigations from the White House before—[and] that’s what will be coming.” [Wall Street Journal]
* Earlier this week, Bob Woodward said that former Trump attorney John Dowd told the president he couldn’t testify in the Russia investigation because he’s “disabled” and “can’t tell the truth.” That sounds just about right. [People]
* The University of California Berkeley School of Law may soon be doing away with almost all references to John Henry Boalt thanks to his racist views. Public comment on the issue will close on Halloween, and then Dean Erwin Chemerinsky may formally apply to dename Boalt Hall. Let’s see what happens with this one. [ABA Journal]
* “This is clear interference with an ongoing criminal investigation.” Representatives from the New York state tax department reportedly met with Michael Cohen’s attorney yesterday over the objections of Southern District of New York. [CNN]
* A family of conspiracy theorists: Donald Trump Jr. says he’s not worried about going to jail as a result of Robert Mueller’s Russia probe, but “[t]hat doesn’t mean they won’t try to create something” that could put him in jail. [USA Today]
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Law Schools
T14 Law School Mourns The Presumed Death Of A Student After He Fell From A Waterfall
He was trying to take a photograph when he fell. -
Law Schools
Law School Dean Sets World Cycling Record, Gets Profiled On ESPNW
She's been referred to as a 'good role model for women navigating a healthy lifestyle and an ambitious career.' -
Law Schools
Public Interest IP Law School Clinics
Participating in clinics can be an amazing opportunity to gain valuable practical experience. -
Government
Berkeley Law Alum And Former NFL Player Colin Allred On Following Obama, The American Dream, And His Path Back To Dallas
This millennial attorney is running for office, and his story is inspiring. -
Non-Sequiturs
Non-Sequiturs: 10.20.17
* Harvard Law School is conducting a mental health survey. But will the respondents answer with candor? [Law and More]
* Transitions are hard, if not almost impossible to pull off. David Boies is eager to help his firm outlive him. [Big Law Business]
* Friday Fun Fact: Donald Trump’s campaign is spending $1 of every $10 donated on legal fees. [CNN]
* Highlights on a legal ethics course taught through collaborative learning. [Just Resolutions]
* That time Cy Vance took a donation right before a letting someone slide without charges. No, not that time. Or that time. This is a new time. [CBS News]
* Boalt law student defends the clone troopers for executing all the Jedi. Still no one able to defend George Lucas for making the prequels. [Legal Geeks]
* Congrats to Fix the Court for getting some transparency by securing an audio stream of this morning’s D.C. Circuit argument. [Fix the Court]
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Law Schools
This Story About Dershowitz Getting 'Blocked' At Berkeley Seems Way Overblown
Alan Dershowitz complained of censorship, but he really ran afoul of the ongoing effort to hack free speech. -
Law Schools, Rankings
New T14 Dean Thinks His Law School Will Crack The Top 5 In The U.S. News Rankings
Does this law school stand a chance? -
Morning Docket
Morning Docket: 08.23.17
* Statues of Chief Justice Roger Taney may have been removed in his native Maryland, but don’t expect his bust to be removed from the Supreme Court’s Great Hall or his portrait to be taken down from the high court’s East conference room in the near future. The visage of the Dred Scott opinion’s author will remain. [National Law Journal]
* The Charlotte School of Law may be dead, but that doesn’t mean that former students’ proposed class-action lawsuits against the school have been put out to pasture. Though the bulk of the claims were dismissed, two such cases with allegations of unfair and deceptive trade practices have survived motions for summary judgment. Best of luck against Infilaw’s first fallen school. [Law.com]
* Much to his defense attorney Benjamin Bratman’s chagrin, the names of the jurors who convicted Martin Shkreli of securities fraud have been released. They’ve been talking to the press about the disgraced pharma bro, and one of them referred to him as “his own worst enemy.” [DealBook / New York Times]
* Meanwhile, Martin Shkreli’s ex-lawyer, former Kaye Scholer partner Evan Greebel, remains charged with wire fraud conspiracy, a charge on which Shkreli was acquitted by a jury. Greebel’s defense attorneys at Gibson Dunn have called this “a Kafkaesque scenario,” that is “frightening for every corporate lawyer in America simply doing their jobs representing clients.” [New York Law Journal]
* Berkeley Law is planning to launch a hybrid online/on-campus LL.M. program for foreign-educated attorneys. Students will be able to complete their fall and spring semesters online, but must attend classes on campus at the law school during the summer months. Tuition is a whopping $57,471. [The Recorder]
* Earlier this week, a California jury handed down the largest verdict thus far in a talcum powder cancer case against Johnson & Johnson. The plaintiff, Eva Echeverria, who had used J&J baby powder since the 1950s and was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 2007, was awarded $417 million. [Consumer Affairs]
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Law Schools, Rankings
In The Wake Of Rankings Drop, Berkeley Law Sees Budget Slashed
Please see the update to this story. -
Crime, Law Schools, White-Collar Crime
How Not To Use Your Berkeley Law Degree
Making license plates just isn't a J.D. advantage job. -
Deaths, Labor / Employment, On The Job, Women's Issues
Managing My Expectations (And Reflecting On The Passing Of Herma Hill Kay)
The work of the late Herma Hill Kay, a crusader for gender equality in the legal profession, is far from done.