Court and legal news roundup
This week in legal news: a Maryland attorney is disbarred after lying on expense reports, Snapchat faces legal action after a teen crashes while using a filter, and more.
This week in legal news: a Maryland attorney is disbarred after lying on expense reports, Snapchat faces legal action after a teen crashes while using a filter, and more.
This week, the SCJC in New York warns about the ethics risks of social media use, legal professionals debate the need for tech competency requirements for judges, and alleged hacks cost a small firm more than $200K. Get the latest here.
This week in legal news: a Florida lawyer is arrested after stripping naked in a bar, another Florida attorney receives a three-year suspension from the State Bar, and California State Bar deals with data breaches from a judicial records site. Read these stories and more in the weekly roundup.
This week, social media is again making headlines, but not for Big Tech lawsuits. Read about these stories and more in this week’s news roundup.
In this week’s news: more virtual trial mishaps, legal action against big tech companies, and more. Check out the weekly roundup here.
This week’s news includes more developments on big tech antitrust cases, plus some impressive perks from a major law firm fighting burnout. Read more here.
This week, legal tech is making headlines. From Zoom testimony to accidental YouTube streams causing legal concerns, check out this week’s most interesting headlines.
This week’s highlights Report shows that demand for legal services soared in 2021, but firms still needed to raise prices to make up for pandemic-related
This week’s highlights include court closures, an attorney convicted of money laundering, a general counsel stepping down amid abuse charges, and more.
This week: President Biden’s Supreme Court commission reports but declines to make recommendations, a bill to end PACER fees advances in the Senate, there’s continued growth in legal jobs, and California tops a tort reform organization’s list of “judicial hellholes”
This week: New research shows pace of tech change in the court “unprecedented”, LA expands online dispute resolution to eviction cases, two national firms announce merger plans, and a legal news service sues for access to public court records.
This week: The Florida Supreme Court rules finds parking ticket app unlawful, Biden’s Supreme Court commission is split over key recommendations, law firms are struggling with attrition, and legal services inflation jumps suddenly
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