
New Year, New Merger: Top U.K. Firm Announces Tie-Up With U.S. Firm
Everything's bigger in Texas, including the law firm mergers.
Everything's bigger in Texas, including the law firm mergers.
This story took a bizarre turn.
Findings from the MyCase 2025 Legal Industry Report.
This is fantastic news for new parents.
Four new mergers announced.
The regulators said 'seniority and intoxication were aggravating factors.'
Trying to keep the awkward conversations to a minimum.
"Decrypting Crypto" is a go-to guide for understanding the technology and tools underlying Web3 and issues raised in the context of specific legal practice areas.
The firm is closing an office as part of this plan.
That was weird.
* Remember when President Trump attacked the federal judiciary, and Neil Gorsuch, then a Supreme Court nominee, called those statements "disheartening" and "demoralizing"? Gorsuch's comments reportedly pissed off the president so much that his SCOTUS nomination was almost rescinded. [Washington Post]
* After passing the GOP's sweeping tax overhaul by a margin of 227-203 yesterday afternoon, the House will need to vote again this morning because several provisions in the bill -- including its name -- violate the Senate's Byrd Rule requirements. [TIME]
* Under would-be SCOTUS Justice Chief Judge Merrick Garland's leadership, the D.C. Circuit will now live-stream audio of any oral argument upon request. Send your requests by email to [email protected]. [Washington Post]
* See ya, Sedgwick! Up to 15 partners and up to 65 lawyers and staff members from the failed firm will be headed to Clyde & Co, boosting the British firm's U.S. partnership by one-third. [American Lawyer; Big Law Business]
* What are the 20 cheapest law schools in the U.S. News Top 100? If you want to do your future finances a favor, you may have to go South. [Law.com]
* "They're not just preparing for a court challenge. They’re prepared to lose." President Trump has been including severability clauses in some of his most controversial executive orders and proclamations (e.g., Travel Ban 2.0, Travel Ban 3.0, and the transgender military ban). At this rate, he's on pace to use them more than all of his most recent predecessors combined. [USA Today] * Special counsel Robert Mueller filed his legal team's first expenditure report yesterday afternoon, and it's a doozy. Thus far, $6.7 million has been spent between May 17, 2017, and September 30, 2017, and contrary to popular belief at the White House, the Russia investigation is nowhere near an end. [National Law Journal] * The Justice Department is now open to regulating guns; we repeat, the Justice Department is now open to regulating guns -- or at least parts that can make guns even more deadly than they already are. That said, the DOJ has entered into a rule-making process that will redetermine the legality of bump stock devices. [CNN] * All has been quiet on the Sedgwick front for about a week, but now we've got word that "many" of the failed firm's lawyers from numerous offices -- including San Francisco-based team led by partners Bruce Celebrezze and Alexander Potente -- will be joining British insurance firm Clyde & Co in the new year. [American Lawyer] * In case you missed it, Judge Valarie E. Turner -- who allowed a law clerk to wear her robes and preside over cases -- was recently forced into retirement after admitting that she'd been diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease and "acknowledg[ing] that she [was] permanently unable to perform her judicial duties." [Chicago Sun-Times]
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