Lead Yourself First: An Interview With Judge Raymond M. Kethledge
Enjoy these insights and career advice from a prominent judge (and possible Supreme Court justice).
Enjoy these insights and career advice from a prominent judge (and possible Supreme Court justice).
They're all distinguished conservative jurists, although not the most diverse group.
Founded in 2017, the Baltimore-based Law Office of Stephen L. Thomas Jr. unified case management, communication, and payments with 8am—saving 10–20 hours a week for clients, trials, and growth.
Which prominent conservative judge just met with President-elect Donald Trump?
It looks like it's down to two: Judge Diane Sykes and Judge Bill Pryor.
* "In addition to winning the Electoral College in a landslide, I won the popular vote if you deduct the millions of people who voted illegally." President-elect Donald Trump can't keep himself away from his Twitter account thanks to the recount that's going on, and now he seems to have accidentally called into question the legitimacy of the election in its entirety. Oopsie! [New York Times] * Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign has jumped on Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein's election recount bandwagon, but according to campaign general counsel Marc Elias, it's only "to ensure the process proceeds in a manner that is fair to all sides." Thus far, Wisconsin has already agreed to perform a recount. [CBS News] * Just like the president-elect who's included him on his Supreme Court shortlist, Judge Raymond M. Kethledge of the Sixth Circuit seems to be incredibly blunt. The judge expects civility between parties in briefs, but is well known for his "caustic rebuke[s]" and "eviscerat[ing] [litigants] like first-day law student[s]." [Big Law Business] * Per recent TV ads, "Wells Fargo is making changes to make things right," but only if those changes don't involve public court records: Wells Fargo customers who had unauthorized accounts opened in their names have filed a class-action suit, but the bank is trying to quash their claims by forcing plaintiffs into arbitration. [CNN Money] * "If you look at other parts of the state — Houston, Dallas, San Antonio — everybody has a law school." But that doesn't mean that everybody needs to have a law school. A dearth of potential applicants be damned, because lawmakers in the Texas Rio Grande Valley are going ahead with plans to establish a public law school in the area. [Valley Star]