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8 Unknowns About California’s New Marijuana Laws
Stay tuned to see how California deals with these complex issues during rule-making.
Stay tuned to see how California deals with these complex issues during rule-making.
Be sure to stay tuned as Florida's Department of Health gears up for Amendment 2 rule making.
Here's how you can spend more time practicing law, and less time sorting, sifting, and summarizing.
Out with the stereotypical lazy stoner and in with entrepreneurial pothead! But before you help those who cater to the tokers and smokers, be sure you understand what’s needed for them to legally get their smoke on...
Two of the biggest marijuana victories came from Florida and California. What will the legal landscape look like there?
* Following a concession call from Hillary Clinton last night, and in a "stunning repudiation of the establishment," Donald Trump was elected as the 45th president of the United States. Congratulations to President-elect Trump. How do you like them apples? This historic election wasn't "rigged" after all! [New York Times] * Marijuana also won big in the polls last night. Voters in California, Massachusetts, Nevada, and Maine approved recreational marijuana initiatives, with Arkansas, North Dakota, and Florida approving medical marijuana initiatives, but "[t]here are various ways in which a hostile White House could trip things up." We'll have more information on this news later today. [Washington Post] * As we saw in the ATL electoral law school poll, many practicing lawyers voted for Hillary Clinton, but alas, it was all for naught. For example, Lisa Blatt, head of Arnold & Porter’s appellate and Supreme Court practice, had this to say when asked who she voted for in the election: "Duh! Clinton; early voting; and seriously?" [Big Law Business] * Despite UCLA Law Professor Richard Sander's pleas to use the data to support his opposition to affirmative action, the California State Bar need not disclose the race or ethnicity of those who took the bar exam since 1972 because it would amount to an invasion of privacy for those promised confidentiality. [San Francisco Chronicle] * Per an ALM survey, revenue per partner slipped in 2015 to an average of $468,511, down from an average of $491,729 in 2014. This 4.7 percent decline is the largest ALM has seen since it first started tracking the metric. Why is this happening? "Demand is soft. Quite a few firms still have more lawyers than work for them." [Am Law Daily] * This must be an interesting situation for the clothing company's GC-cum-CEO: After deciding to ignore its own reorganization plan and announcing that it would be winding down its U.K. operations, American Apparel is desperately attempting to stave off another bankruptcy filing and has now resumed talks with potential buyers. [Reuters]
It's time to briefly visit each marijuana ballot initiative, especially since legalization or medical marijuana reform in one state can greatly impact other marijuana-friendly states and even federal marijuana policy.
Based on our experience in recent client matters, we have seen an escalating threat posed by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) information technology (IT) workers engaging in sophisticated schemes to evade US and UN sanctions, steal intellectual property from US companies, and/or inject ransomware into company IT environments, in support of enhancing North Korea’s illicit weapons program.
Stay tuned, California financiers, because California's cannabis funding ride has just begun.
How long must Los Angeles continue on with its limited medical marijuana access?
Based on recent deals in the California cannabis industry, the real money seems to be made in five sectors.
The ruling hows that even our country's highest courts will not just rubber stamp everything the federal government does against cannabis.
How to make the right decision, and why there might be another way to shape a fulfilling legal career on your own terms.
Will the state puff-puff-pass the vote this November?
Don't fall prey to any of these cannabis industry pitfalls.
Ohio's MMJ program is looking like it will be as restrictive and as competitive as any we've seen in other states.
The Justice Department announced it will finally drop its four-year long legal battle against Harborside Health Center. What does this mean for America's cannabis industry?
* Given the fact that Senate Republicans have remained firm in their opposition to Supreme Court nominee Judge Merrick Garland receiving a confirmation hearing, it seems all the more likely that the vacancy left on the high court by the late Justice Antonin Scalia will remain unfilled until after Election 2016. [Bloomberg Politics] * But is someone having a change of heart? "I would have to admit it's a gamble." Senator Chuck Grassley, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, claims that while he hasn't second-guessed his decision not to hold confirmation hearings for Judge Garland, that it's anyone's guess as to who Donald Trump would choose to fill the position if elected as president. [Huffington Post] * “He said that I had to keep my attorney happy.” A Texas lawyer who was accused of trading sex with court-appointed clients for performing legal work was recently indicted on 18 counts of sexual assault and 17 counts of compelling prostitution. He faces up to 20 years in prison. We may have more on these allegations of misconduct later. [KSAT] * As we mentioned previously, Judge Rosemary Collyer of the District Court for the District of Columbia will be taking senior status on May 18, but we didn't know that she was chosen by Chief Judge John Roberts to take over as the presiding judge of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court the next day. Congrats! [National Law Journal] * Biglaw gets in on the green rush: Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe has partnered with Americans for Safe Access Foundation, a medical marijuana advocacy group, to update a series of manuals on state medical marijuana laws. In the future, Orrick attorneys will man a hotline for medical marijuana patients in need of legal advice. [Am Law Daily] * James Hurlock, former two-decade chairman of White & Case, RIP. [Big Law Business]