Archives
October 15, 2024
Feature
- Royal Salute: Scholarship created in honor of local lawyer
- Membership Round-up
- Judge aims to provide equal justice and access to everyone
- Ambulance Chase
- Education discussion
State
- Religious Liberty Law Section hosts meeting in Troy
- Roberts to speak at Rom/Rakow/Historical Society Luncheon
- Section conducts meeting & AI seminar
- ‘Advanced Trial Training Program’ presented by FBA
- Attorneys look into auto dealerships for webinar
- Webinar examines brain development, youth crime
- Individuals with mental illness focus of MJI webinar
- Local judges support reading program for kids
- New ICBA president aims to grow membership
- Michigan Defense Trial Counsel to conduct 2023 Winter Meeting in Novi
- Law school presents 25th Annual McElroy Lecture
- Law firm launches diversity fellowship for 1L law students
- Annual Gala planned by NAABA-MI for Nov. 2
- Law school hosts conversation on recent struggles against police brutality, October 23
Column
- LEGAL PEOPLE
- COUNSELOR’S CORNER: The blessing of being old
- COMMENTARY: Members of GOP should remember their biting words from the past
- COMMENTARY: European court ruling finds just cause to award soccer players greater freedom of movement
Nation
headlines Oakland County
- Presidents recognized
- Supreme Court justices tell Congress their safety is at risk and more must be spent on security
- As cyclospora illnesses surge to a record, Michigan officials eye lettuce as a possible cause
- ACLU leader and social justice advocate to receive ABA Thurgood Marshall Award
- Health and Housing Summer Fest hosted in Royal Oak
headlines National
- ABA connects death row inmate to pro bono attorneys who help free him
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- 2 judges suspended in separate cases after being indicted on criminal charges
- Convicted ex-judge gets $5K fine but no prison time in immigration case
- Ohio governor signs bill prohibiting foreign litigation funding
- Many small firms collect payments faster than BigLaw counterparts, new data shows




