Lawsuit Alleges Biglaw Partner Duped By Con Man — Or Worse
The complaint alleges the partner was tricked or a co-conspirator.
The complaint alleges the partner was tricked or a co-conspirator.
Technology is your friend.
Now it transforms your document creation with natural language prompts.
Now plaintiffs get a deposition do-over.
Ah, the old Russian nesting dolls defense to fraud.
UPDATE: Guess who is no longer on the firm's website?
Biglaw firm probably doesn't love all this attention.
Protégé™ General AI is fundamentally changing how legal professionals use AI in their everyday practice.
Plus, is a raise in store for associates at the firm?
There's a little twist of the knife on these salary cuts.
But the judge thinks his professional reputation should suffer.
I can't get the image out of my head.
Its new features transform how you can track and analyze the more than 200,000 bills, regulations, and other measures set to be introduced this year.
It's hard to believe any firm would think this was acceptable.
The firm behind the litigation that got the ball rolling.
Well, this isn't a great idea.
* IBM says Watson's about to take away your job, which is an announcement IBM makes roughly every three months because they're taunting us. [Corporate Counsel] * Betty Shelby acquitted in the killing of a black motorist because apparently it's always reasonable to believe a random black guy is going to pull a gun. [NBC News] * Former client seeks $1.4 million back that it spent trying to disqualify BakerHostetler. [Law360] * Latham's Alice Fisher has pulled out of the FBI Director sweepstakes. All eyes are on Joe Lieberman right now, but folks G. Gordon Liddy is just sitting there raring to go. [National Law Journal] * And apparently Sheriff Clarke (who I'm sure was Trump's personal pick) is taking a Homeland Security job so he can focus on harassing the poor and disadvantaged without having to bother all those nice bankers. [New York Times] * Judge Charles Breyer took a break from writing the best benchslaps of all time to issue a groundbreaking video game ruling citing Star Wars and Love Actually -- two movies that should never, ever be mentioned in the same sentence. [Hollywood Reporter] * Stupid fan lawsuit against Warriors center ZaZa Pachulia moves on. [KENS5] * More horrific allegations from Ken Starr's world-class leadership at Baylor. [Huffington Post]
Well, this is awkward...