Recent Headlines from Above the Law
-
Law Schools
USC Gould Law Appoints Its First Black Dean
She masterminded the school's 'Race, Racism, and the Law' course, a first-of-its-kind required course among top law schools. -
Law Schools
Top Law School Now Offering Bachelor's Degree For Undergraduates
If you want a J.D. advantage job but don't want the J.D., this may be the degree for you. -
Law Schools
Law School Professor/Former Biglaw Partner Dies After Ancient Tree Falls On Home
He's remembered as the 'rock' of his family. -
Law Schools
Top 25 Law School To Offer Mandatory Course On Racism
The top law school is the first in the country to require such a course. -
Law Schools
Elite Law School Grad Claims The School's 'Replete With Sexual Misconduct'
The suit alleges a 'policy of indifference.' -
Law Schools
Law School Graduation Speaker Who Stepped Aside Amid Protest Delivers Speech That Could Have Been
Jeh Johnson spoke to law school graduates this weekend about the importance of sticking to standards. -
Law Schools
Law Student Expelled After Trying To Lie, Cheat, And Hack Her Way Onto Law Review
The cheating scheme and cover-up probably took more effort than the actual law review write-on process. -
Law Schools
Top 20 Law School Is The Latest To Accept GRE Scores
How many more people will apply to law school if they don't have to take the LSAT? -
Morning Docket
Morning Docket: 12.27.17
* Is SCOTUS walking back its landmark commitment to equal rights for the LGBTQ community? Considering what could happen in the Masterpiece Cakeshop case and the high court’s refusal to grant cert in Pidgeon, it seems like it. It’s not as if this hasn’t happened before. ::coughBrownvBoardcough:: [New Republic]
* A federal judge ruled that an American ISIS suspect who’s been detained as a “enemy combatant” in Iraq for the last three months is, in fact, entitled to a lawyer, and called the Trump administration’s quest to deny counsel in this case “both remarkable and troubling.” [New York Times]
* Everything really is bigger in Texas: According to the ABA, there are just 0.8 percent more first-year law students this year than last year, but entering classes at law schools in the Lone Star State were 4 percent larger than they were last year. Hopefully all these students will be able to lasso themselves jobs. [Texas Lawyer]
* Lawsuits have been rolling out ever since Apple admitted that it was slowing down iPhones with older batteries, and one of them was filed by two students who currently attend USC Law and hope to get the suit certified as a class-action. This is an absolutely awesome use of winter break. [RT]
* Which states are likely to legalize marijuana in the new year? Vermont, New Jersey, and Michigan may soon end their prohibitions on cannabis, either through legislative means or by puff-puff-passing a voter referendum. [Forbes]
* If you’re a journalist with three years of experience and cover the legal profession in your reporting, consider applying to be a fellow at Loyola Law School’s annual Journalist Law School. There is no cost to attend. The application deadline is February 9, 2018. [Journalist Law School]
* Judge Thomas Griesa, the Southern District of New York jurist who oversaw the Argentine debt battle in federal court, RIP. [New York Law Journal]
-
Law Schools
Law Students Agree: THIS Is The Ugliest Law School In America
They think their law school is absolutely hideous. -
Movies
Hate Billable Hours? Have You Considered Becoming A Mafia Don?
Apparently running the mob is a J.D. Advantage job. -
Law Schools
Moving From The Rap Game To Law School In Search Of Stability
The transition to 1L year is always difficult. Now imagine you were leaving behind a successful rap career. -
Morning Docket
Morning Docket: 12.28.15
* The lawsuit the Bernie Sanders campaign filed against the Democratic National Committee is far from over. Will a “full investigation from top to bottom” reveal that the DNC was trying to burn the Bern in the polls? [Yahoo!]
* It seems like the whole two-year law school gambit isn’t working out as planned, but maybe that’s because it hasn’t been properly executed yet. Sorry, Northwestern, but we’re really not sorry for saying that. [DealBook / New York Times]
* DraftKings and FanDuel threw the challenge flag after Illinois AG Lisa Madigan declared that daily fantasy sports betting was illegal in her state. Gibson Dunn and Boies Schiller hope review of the play won’t result in another “Fail Mary.” [Chicago Tribune]
* “I thought I was the only person who felt that way.” Feeling left out at law school? USC Law is trying to make legal education a little less intimidating for students who are the first in their family to attend institutions of higher education. [Los Angeles Times]
* iDamages: If you thought Apple liked gouging its customers, then you should see what it does to its adversaries. Samsung just paid the company more than $548 million in patent infringement damages, but Apple wants about $180 million more. [Reuters]
-
Law Schools, Sponsored Content
Introducing The Lateral Link Scholarship
Lateral Link will donate ten percent of its fees earned through the firm’s placement of HLS alumni. -
Non-Sequiturs
Non-Sequiturs: 01.06.15
* Governor Chris Christie was worried America didn’t realize he has no respect for his constituents and is a complete fake, so he’s publicly rooting for the Dallas Cowboys over any of the three teams real New Jersey residents root for. He’s also possibly violating ethics rules. [The Legal Blitz / ATL Redline]
* Screech is going to trial. [Associated Press / Yahoo! News]
* New dean at USC. Who is it? [USC Gould School of Law]
* As the Supreme Court stares down the barrel of some highly political cases, will Chief Justice Roberts live up to his promise of non-partisanship? [Chicago Sun-Times]
* Judge Richard Kopf reviews our own Mark Hermann’s book, The Curmudgeon’s Guide to Practicing Law (affiliate link). The verdict? It’s curmudgeon-y. [Hercules and the Umpire]
* David appeared on MSNBC’s The Docket today to discuss Supreme Ambitions (affiliate link). [MSNBC]
* The GOP is very, very against using the popular vote to elect a president which they characterize as an effort to “steal the presidency.” Seriously. [Concurring Opinions]
-
DUI / DWI, Election Law, Law Schools, Non-Sequiturs, Pornography, Pro Se Litigants, State Judges, Television, Trademarks
Non-Sequiturs: 10.27.14
* After being temporarily suspended as part of “Porngate” for trafficking in “highly demeaning portrayals of members of various segments of the population, including women, elderly persons, and uniformed school girls,” Seamus McCaffrey retires from the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. [Philadelphia Daily News] * A group of women lawyers in Miami has called for NBC to cancel Bad Judge because it “depicts a female judge as unethical, lazy, crude, hyper-sexualized, and unfit to hold such an esteemed position of power.” Indeed there’s no place for depicting women judges that way on TV. Especially when Miami is perfectly capable of depicting them that way in real life. [Crushable] * Epic trademark infringement. [Legal Cheek] * Crazy pro se guy slapped down in Canada. [Lowering the Bar] * While almost everyone else is seeing lower applications, USC Law saw a 5 percent bump. [USC Gould School of Law] * Stanford and Dartmouth in hot water over election law charges in Montana. Apparently piercing the imaginary veil of non-partisanship in judicial elections is the problem and not the whole idea of judicial elections in the first place. [Montana Standard] -
Law Schools, LSAT
New Attack Ads Brutalize Rival Law School
A tipster sent us a shot of a new ad for an LSAT prep course that takes it to that hated rival.... -
Ask the Experts, Job Searches, Law Students, Technology
From Across the Desk: An Apprenticeship to Practice -- That Works
Bruce MacEwen discusses one apprenticeship that seems to be working for law school graduates. -
Career Center, Law School Rankings, Law Schools, Rankings, U.S. News Law Firm Rankings
Again With The Law School Rankings: Winners, Losers, Critics, And U.S. News
Which law schools had the biggest gaps between their ATL and U.S. News rankings? Which law schools had the biggest moves up and down in this year's ATL rankings? -
Law School Deans, Law Schools
USC Law Dean Steps Down. The First ATL 50 Casualty?
USC is nicer to its law deans than its football coaches.