The Fight For Pro Se Rights Produces Another Damning Supreme Court Brief
Superstar legal team continues to fight for pro se litigants everywhere.
Superstar legal team continues to fight for pro se litigants everywhere.
Pro se litigants in large swaths of the country are at a distinct disadvantage.
Leveraging agentic AI to triage, prioritize, and automate the law department inbox.
As the case moves to the Supreme Court, William Bond adds even more firepower.
The Fourth Circuit completes a trifecta of appellate cowardice.
Judges often lift analysis from the parties. This practice has to stop -- especially in pro se matters.
* Are law firms being exploited by their clients to launder money? [Wall Street Journal] * Richard McLaren is the law professor who laid the ground work for Russia potentially being banned from the Rio Olympics over a doping scandal. [New York Times] * An analysis of the legal issues in the new Ghostbusters movie. [The Legal Geeks] * Review of Anxious Lawyer (affiliate link), a new book by AtL columnist Jeena Cho and Karen Gifford. [Legal Ink Magazine] * What does Rick Hasen think will happen in Texas now that the 5th Circuit has struck down its voter ID law? [KUT] * Matthew Dowd and Robert Kulik, the lawyers turned children's book authors we previously profiled, went on TV to discuss their work. [ABC News]
Designed to reduce manual docket work by prioritizing what litigators need most: on-demand full docket summarization that explains the whole case to date, followed by on-demand document summaries for filing triage, and AI-powered natural language searching for faster search and retrieval.
These are not your typical books by lawyers.