Fox News Put Simpsons Clips On Exhibit List In Case You Were Wondering How Little They Expected To Go To Trial
'Weaseling out of things is important to learn. It's what separates us from the animals.... Except the weasel.'
Opus 2 Steps Up Its AI Game With Acquisition Of A Legal Tech Startup
With the addition of Uncover’s technology, the litigation software is delivering rapid innovation.
Trump Has Legal Advice For Fox As Dominion Trial Is Delayed A Day
Isn't that how they got in this mess in the first place?
Morning Docket: 04.17.23
* Dominion’s defamation trial against Fox delayed at the last moment, raising speculation that Fox may be trying to settle approximately a two years too late. [CNN] * US News delays release of law school rankings following freak out from schools worried about what their own stupid boycott caused. [Reuters] * Clarence Thomas is amending his old financial disclosures to include the shady revelations of the past few weeks. He claims this is all unnecessary because he lost money on these deals despite the statute being very clear that profit and loss are irrelevant to disclosure. But who really believes in holding people to the explicit text of a statute, huh? [Huffington Post] * Federal Circuit is investigating the fitness of one of its 95-year-old judges. Not that there's really much they can do about it. [Bloomberg Law News] * Is it bad when your lawyer is recusing himself because he had to testify to the grand jury about you? That seems bad. [Washington Post] * Ron Klain heads back to O’Melveny. [Axios]
Fox News Gets Its Ass Kicked In Court Before Dominion Defamation Trial Even Starts
Is it bad when the judge tells the lawyers to preserve all their internal comms? Seems bad!
Morning Docket: 04.12.23
* Don't you hate it when you get to the eve of trial and have to admit your disclosures about the client's leadership structure have been wrong all this time? No... because that doesn't happen in real life. Unless you're representing Fox News. [Law360] * Kentucky is going to auction off the gun from the Louisville shooting? Like, for real? [Washington Post] * Breaking up is hard to do as EY learns. [Bloomberg Law News] * Johnson & Johnson "faces skepticism" over bankruptcy shenanigans in strong contender for understatement of the year. [Reuters] * It's good to be from Missouri. If you're a law firm anyway. [American Lawyer] * "10 pics of Pedro Pascal dressed like law firms" is surprisingly true to the headline. [LegalCheek]
LexisNexis Practical Guidance Rolls Out Dedicated Practice Area for AI & Technology
The new generation of AI-related legal issues are inherently cross-disciplinary, implicating corporate law, intellectual property, data privacy, employment, corporate governance and regulatory compliance.
Morning Docket: 04.06.23
* British researchers determine that defendants opting to take their oath on non-religious texts are more likely to be convicted. So I guess you're better off lying under oath that you're religious? That seems sub-optimal. [LegalCheek] * Senior associate says the quiet part out loud when it comes to the Biglaw workload. [American Lawyer] * Dominion can make Rupert Murdoch testify at trial in yet another, "just give them a billion dollars and spare yourselves" development. [Reuters] * Fifth Circuit panel rejects GOP state government effort to overturn Biden environmental laws. They'd better not go to Vegas because they must have the worst luck in the world to land a three-judge panel of the Fifth Circuit unwilling to arbitrarily stymie the Biden administration. [Law360] * Diploma mills fight back against student loan forgiveness making their value proposition to students... even worse? These may not be the sharpest tools in the higher education shed. [Courthouse News Service] * Reminiscent of all the Disney coverage lately, it seems as though the anti-ESG movement is long on state lawmakers bragging and short on substantive action. [Bloomberg Law]
Fox Moves To Redact Parts Of Discrimination Complaint That Make Their Lawyers Look Hella Shady
Streisand Effect, how does it go?
The Biglaw Firm Implicated In Latest Fox News Legal Drama
The Biglaw institution is getting dragged into a messy situation.
Legal Is Changing. And NeoSummit Is Where The Future Is Being Built.
Legal and operational leaders are gathering May 6–7 in Fort Lauderdale to confront the questions the industry hasn't answered—with a keynote from Amanda Knox setting the tone.
Morning Docket: 03.21.23
* NYC is prepared for protests surrounding Trump indictment. Precaution is always good, but most of his supporters inclined to go out and do something dangerous are probably already serving their January 6th sentence. [Reuters] * Meanwhile, the House GOP wants Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg to testify to Congress about this process because federalism and states rights are just empty slogans. [Courthouse News Service] * Fox producer claims Winston & Strawn and network attorneys pressured her to be evasive in Dominion suit deposition. Sometimes witnesses misinterpret "don't speculate" for "be evasive" but reading some of the details, this seems to be... not that. [Law360] * Proposed class action against JPMorgan Chase for aiding in sex trafficking moves forward. [New York Law Journal] * Debevoise partners took the firm's headcount growth on the chin with average profits dipping to a mere $4.42 million per partner. This might look very smart in a few months when they're going to need all those retained associates for ramped up work because... [American Lawyer] * ... Biglaw projects an M&A revamp over the second half of the year. Which is the prediction Above the Law has made for months so it's nice to see the firms catching up. [Bloomberg Law News] * Kevin Costner's case heads to the South Dakota Supreme Court. I didn't like The Postman either, but we don't need to make a whole case out of it. [Kelo]
Latest Dominion Doc Dump Shows Big Mens Rea Energy At Fox
Don't ya hate it when your group chats leak?
Fox Previews Dominion Defamation Defense: Maria Bartiromo Is Just Really, Really Gullible
You go to war with the army you have, right?
The April Trial Of Dominion v. Fox
The pundits assume the case will actually go to trial in April. But will it?