Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Above the Law: Morning Docket: 02.20.13

Above the Law
A Legal Web Site – News, Commentary, and Opinions on Law Firms, Lawyers, Law School, Law Suits, Judges and Courts
Morning Docket: 02.20.13
Feb 20th 2013, 14:04

Sexytary, at your service?

* Should the mentally disabled receive the death penalty? Neither SCOTUS nor Georgia's Supreme Court stayed Warren Lee Hill's execution, but the Eleventh Circuit saved the day. [Washington Post]

* If you're looking for a mishmosh of Biglaw news, from new offices to new hires to new firm leaders, then look no further. If only this list were in alphabetical order! [Law Firm Insider / U.S. News & World Report]

* Dewey know why this partner who was sued by Barclays in the U.K. over his capital loan is suing the bank in the U.S.? It involves an alleged fraud and Joel Sanders. [Thomson Reuters News & Insight]

* So much for that "silly sideshow": Judge Richard Sullivan of the S.D.N.Y. hasn't made a ruling in the Greenlight case yet, but he says David Einhorn may have a "likelihood of success on the merits" if the matter proceeds further. [Bloomberg]

* One of the partners at this small law firm apparently watched Secretary a few too many times, and he's now accused of threatening to "whip" his ex-assistant into shape because she was a "bad girl." [New York Post]

* The University of Utah's S.J. Quinney College of Law named an interim successor to former dean Hiram Chodosh, but we can't say he's a law dean hottie. He looks like Van Pelt from Jumanji. [Salt Lake Tribune]

* The Catholic University of America's Columbus School of Law will house the first clinic in the nation devoted to pardons and the law. It figures that a religious school would focus on legal Hail Marys. [Blog of Legal Times]

* Career alternatives for law school dropouts: mining magnate and financier of the Titanic II. Much like the value proposition of going to law school for today's generation, this idea is unsinkable. [New York Times]

* Prosecutors have upgraded the charge against Oscar Pistorius to premeditated murder, and one could now say the track star doesn't have a leg to stand on when it comes to being released on bail pending trial. [CNN]

* D is for… divorce? Sesame Street is talking about divorce in a way that children can understand, but alas, the series neglects important topics like "why mommy is a whore" and "why daddy drinks." [Law Firm Newswire]

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Tags: Apple, Barclays Bank, Biglaw, Career Alternatives, Clemency, clinical programs, Clive Palmer, Columbus School of Law - The Catholic University of America, David Einhorn, Death Penalty, Dewey & LeBoeuf, Divorce, Divorce Law, Divorce Train Wrecks, Family Law, Federal Judges, Fraud, Greenlight Capital, Herbert Waichman, Joel Sanders, Judge Richard Sullivan, Kids, Law School Deans, Law School Dropouts, Law Schools, Londell McMillan, Money, Morning Docket, Murder, Oscar Pistorius, Pardons, Parker Waichman LLP, Partner Issues, Partners With Issues, Reeva Steenkamp, Robert Adler, Secretaries / Administrative Assistants, Sesame Street, Small Law Firms, Titanic II, University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law, Warren Lee Hill

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