Courts & legal news weekly roundup
This week: U.S. Supreme Court set to begin new term with a pack and controversial docket, eviction tsunami elusive—for now, an attorney avoids sanctions for lack of social media knowledge, and more.
This week: U.S. Supreme Court set to begin new term with a pack and controversial docket, eviction tsunami elusive—for now, an attorney avoids sanctions for lack of social media knowledge, and more.
This week: Survey finds law firms are investing in tech but lawyers aren’t using it, California’s judicial council wants remote proceedings to be made permanent, NY publishes live eviction data, and comfort dogs ruled permissible in PA criminal trials.
This week: Female lawyers still seriously underrepresented in senior positions says new report, appeal court opts against expanding definition of attorney-client privilege, and California’s lawmakers make a push for remote proceedings to continue post-pandemic.
This week: Preliminary data shows a rise in divorce filings, eviction moratoriums in California and Illinois may expire soon, a new dating site is launched just for lawyers and those who want to meet them, and more.
This week: New access to justice reports show most Americans face legal problems, AG seeks law school help to fight evictions, Florida courts re-introduce COVID-19 measures, and the California Bar Association rules on ethics obligations when working from home.
This week: A new report shows jump in state court backlogs, mid-level associates are unhappy with return-to-the-office plans, and the Florida bar asks how many YouTube fans makes you a celebrity.
© InfoTrack US, Inc.