Join The Conversation On In-House Careers! – Above the Law

Olga
V.
Mack


With
bonus
season
on
the
horizon,
we’re
putting
the
finishing
touches
on
our
annual
look
into
the
black
box
of
corporate
law
department
pay. 


New
this
year,
our
own
Olga
V.
Mack
will
be
providing
insights
and
analysis
accompanying
the
report. 


She’ll
also
be
leading
online
focus
groups
this
fall,
where
in-house
professionals
can
share
their
thoughts
with
their
colleagues

and
for
potential
inclusion
in
this
high-profile
project. 


Interested
in
joining? 



You
can
register
here
,
and
Olga
will
be
following
up
with
a
link
to
the
call. 


Stay
tuned
for
our
survey
results,
drawing
on
well
over
1,000
responses.


Bonus Time

Enter
your
email
address
to
sign
up
for
ATL’s

Bonus
&
Salary
Increase
Alerts
.


Morning Docket: 10.11.24 – Above the Law

Not
Olive
Garden
pasta
(via
Getty
Images)

*
Uh
oh…
SpaghettiOs:
Woman
arrested
after
cops
found
a
“suspicious
substance”
on
a
spoon
in
her
purse
during
a
routine
traffic
stop

it
was
canned
pasta
sauce.
[

Lowering
the
Bar
]

*
Respect
the
LinkedIn
hustle:
FTX
officer
updates
profile
to
reflect
prison
sentence.
[CNN]

*
What
this
tells
me
is
that
Roberts
is
still
very,
very

annoyed
with
the
Fifth
Circuit’s
nonsense
.
[National
Law
Journal
]

*
Speaking
of
forum
shopping:
“US
Appellate
Judge
Urges
Caution
on
Judge-Shopping
Rule.”
This
is
why,
unfortunately,
it’s
become
necessary
for
journalists
to
clarify
“TRUMP
Appellate
Judge
Urges
Caution
on
Judge-Shopping
Rule.”
Without
that
context,
this
news
story
reads
as
though
this
isn’t
a
wholly
partisan
stance.

*
The
thing
about
loser-pays
is
that
the
winners
can
rack
up
some
epic
mini-bar
charges
along
the
way.
[Roll
on
Friday
]

*
Nixon
Peabody
sues
personal
injury
firm.
[ABA
Journal
]

*
If
only
some
Supreme
Court
justices
cared
about
miscarriages
of
justice
as
much
as
they
care
about
jailing
women
after
a
miscarriage.
[Dorf
on
Law
]

*
Judge
Kindred
texted
with
former
clerk/inappropriate
relationship/prosecutor
about
a
case
as
he
presided
over
it.
This
is
distinct
from
the
senior
prosecutor
who
sent
the
judge
nude
photographs.
Get
it
together,
Alaska!
[Reuters]

Attorney Says Law Firm Filmed Pornos In His Office – Above the Law

A
lawyer
in
Colorado
has
filed
a
lawsuit
against
his
old
firm.
That’s
not,
in
itself,
surprising.
Law
firm
breakups
happen
all
the
time,
usually
over
money
or

generalized
ill-will
over
management
clashes
.

So
what’s
going
on
with

Tannenbaum
v.
Trost
,
a
complaint
recently
filed
in
Denver?

15.
Mr.
Tannenbaum
opened
a
law
practice
in
2010.

16.
In
2014,
Tannenbaum
and
Trost
decided
to
form
a
law
firm
together.

17.
Tannenbaum
and
Trost
operated
the
law
firm
together
until
2015,
at
which
point
they
invited
a
third
partner,
Robert
E.
Burk,
a
friend
of
theirs
from
Law
School.

18.
Thereafter
Tannenbaum,
Trost
and
Burk
ran
the
firm,
equally
sharing
duties,
profits
to
Tannenbaum’s
knowledge
at
the
time.

So
far,
so
good…

19.
Unbeknownst
to
Tannenbaum,
Trost
and
Burk
were
simultaneously
using
the
firm’s
offices
and
resources
to
film
pornography
which
was
distributed
for
significant
profit
using
various
websites
including
but
not
limited
to
TheBackroomCastingCouch.com
and
pornhub.com.

Remember
that
time
in

The
League


the
brilliant
FX
show
following
the
shenanigans
of
a
fantasy
football
league

when
Andre
finished
last
and
his
assigned
“punishment”
involved
the
gang
secretly
filming
a
porn
movie
in
his
well-appointed
loft?
Perhaps
I
was
too
quick
to
judge
that
plot
as
too
difficult
to
believe.

Tannenbaum
also
claims
that
his
partners’
filmmaking
efforts
“made
it
a
point
to
ejaculate
onto
the
possessions
of
Mr.
Tannenbaum.”
Friends,
this
is
why
work-from-home
policies
are
so
important.

But
it’s
not
just
about
the
porn:

21.
Despite
using
their
law
firm’s
money,
office
space,
and
network
for
production
of
their
videos,
Trost
and
Burk
did
not
inform
Tannenbaum
of
their
activities.

22.
It
follows
they
did
not
share
any
of
the
substantive
revenues
they
made
from
their
production,
though
the
operating
agreement
of
the
firm
requires
them
to
do
so.

Fun
fact:
Cravath’s
partnership
agreement
also
explicitly
requires
sharing
porn
profits.

While
the
porn
allegations
make
for
quite
the
lede,
the
complaint
takes
a
sad
and
serious
turn
from
there.
Hopefully
this
is
a
case
that
can
be
resolved
amicably
and
the
folks
involved
get
access
to
the
resources
they
need.




HeadshotJoe
Patrice
 is
a
senior
editor
at
Above
the
Law
and
co-host
of

Thinking
Like
A
Lawyer
.
Feel
free
to email
any
tips,
questions,
or
comments.
Follow
him
on Twitter or

Bluesky

if
you’re
interested
in
law,
politics,
and
a
healthy
dose
of
college
sports
news.
Joe
also
serves
as
a

Managing
Director
at
RPN
Executive
Search
.

Morning Docket: 10.11.24 – Above the Law

Not
Olive
Garden
pasta
(via
Getty
Images)

*
Uh
oh…
SpaghettiOs:
Woman
arrested
after
cops
found
a
“suspicious
substance”
on
a
spoon
in
her
purse
during
a
routine
traffic
stop

it
was
canned
pasta
sauce.
[

Lowering
the
Bar
]

*
Respect
the
LinkedIn
hustle:
FTX
officer
updates
profile
to
reflect
prison
sentence.
[CNN]

*
What
this
tells
me
is
that
Roberts
is
still
very,
very

annoyed
with
the
Fifth
Circuit’s
nonsense
.
[National
Law
Journal
]

*
Speaking
of
forum
shopping:
“US
Appellate
Judge
Urges
Caution
on
Judge-Shopping
Rule.”
This
is
why,
unfortunately,
it’s
become
necessary
for
journalists
to
clarify
“TRUMP
Appellate
Judge
Urges
Caution
on
Judge-Shopping
Rule.”
Without
that
context,
this
news
story
reads
as
though
this
isn’t
a
wholly
partisan
stance.

*
The
thing
about
loser-pays
is
that
the
winners
can
rack
up
some
epic
mini-bar
charges
along
the
way.
[Roll
on
Friday
]

*
Nixon
Peabody
sues
personal
injury
firm.
[ABA
Journal
]

*
If
only
some
Supreme
Court
justices
cared
about
miscarriages
of
justice
as
much
as
they
care
about
jailing
women
after
a
miscarriage.
[Dorf
on
Law
]

*
Judge
Kindred
texted
with
former
clerk/inappropriate
relationship/prosecutor
about
a
case
as
he
presided
over
it.
This
is
distinct
from
the
senior
prosecutor
who
sent
the
judge
nude
photographs.
Get
it
together,
Alaska!
[Reuters]

Law Student To Lead Helicopter Flyover At Big SEC Football Game – Above the Law

Kyle
Wise
(courtesy
photo)

Law
students
usually
have
pretty
demanding
schedules
when
it
comes
to
their
studies,
but
those
who
are
able
to
do
more
with
what
little
free
time
they
have
are
standouts
among
their
peers.
Kyle
Wise,
a
veteran
who’s
currently
a
3L
at
the
University
of
Alabama
School
of
Law,
uses
his
free
time
to
admirably
serve
his
country.

Wise,
who
leads
the
Alabama
Military
Law
Society
as
its
president,
is
a
commander
in
the
1-151
Attack
Battalion
of
the
South
Carolina
National
Guard
aviation
unit,
where
he
oversees
a
36-member
Attack
Aviation
Company.
He
often
finds
himself
juggling
his
legal
studies
while
traveling
back
and
forth
to
South
Carolina
several
times
a
month
to
conduct
flights
and
support
his
crew.

“I
do
many
of
my
class
readings
the
week
before
so
I
can
prepare
for
the
next
week
in
between
flights,”
Wise
told
the

UA
News
Center
.
“If
it
is
not
a
training
or
drill
weekend,
I’ll
leave
for
South
Carolina
on
Wednesday
and
come
home
to
Alabama
on
Friday
to
start
lining
up
on
the
classes
that
I
missed.
If
it’s
a
drill
weekend,
I
usually
won’t
return
until
Sunday
at
midnight
and
will
play
catch-up
throughout
the
week.”

This
weekend,
Wise
will
lead
his
company
in
a
four
AH-64
Apache
helicopter
flyover
for
the
Alabama
vs.
South
Carolina
football
game.
Sources
say
that
having
a
current
student
leading
the
company
as
a
pilot
is
a
rarity.
If
you
watch
the
game
on
Saturday,
you’ll
be
able
to
see
Wise
flying
high
over
the
stadium.
Roll
Tide!

Congratulations
to
Kyle
Wise
on
this
awesome
achievement!


Alabama
Law
Student
to
Lead
Apache
Helicopter
Flyover
at
SEC
Showdown

[UA
News
Center]



Staci ZaretskyStaci
Zaretsky
 is
a
senior
editor
at
Above
the
Law,
where
she’s
worked
since
2011.
She’d
love
to
hear
from
you,
so
please
feel
free
to

email

her
with
any
tips,
questions,
comments,
or
critiques.
You
can
follow
her
on

X/Twitter

and

Threads

or
connect
with
her
on

LinkedIn
.

Morning Docket: 10.11.24 – Above the Law

Not
Olive
Garden
pasta
(via
Getty
Images)

*
Uh
oh…
SpaghettiOs:
Woman
arrested
after
cops
found
a
“suspicious
substance”
on
a
spoon
in
her
purse
during
a
routine
traffic
stop

it
was
canned
pasta
sauce.
[

Lowering
the
Bar
]

*
Respect
the
LinkedIn
hustle:
FTX
officer
updates
profile
to
reflect
prison
sentence.
[CNN]

*
What
this
tells
me
is
that
Roberts
is
still
very,
very

annoyed
with
the
Fifth
Circuit’s
nonsense
.
[National
Law
Journal
]

*
Speaking
of
forum
shopping:
“US
Appellate
Judge
Urges
Caution
on
Judge-Shopping
Rule.”
This
is
why,
unfortunately,
it’s
become
necessary
for
journalists
to
clarify
“TRUMP
Appellate
Judge
Urges
Caution
on
Judge-Shopping
Rule.”
Without
that
context,
this
news
story
reads
as
though
this
isn’t
a
wholly
partisan
stance.

*
The
thing
about
loser-pays
is
that
the
winners
can
rack
up
some
epic
mini-bar
charges
along
the
way.
[Roll
on
Friday
]

*
Nixon
Peabody
sues
personal
injury
firm.
[ABA
Journal
]

*
If
only
some
Supreme
Court
justices
cared
about
miscarriages
of
justice
as
much
as
they
care
about
jailing
women
after
a
miscarriage.
[Dorf
on
Law
]

*
Judge
Kindred
texted
with
former
clerk/inappropriate
relationship/prosecutor
about
a
case
as
he
presided
over
it.
This
is
distinct
from
the
senior
prosecutor
who
sent
the
judge
nude
photographs.
Get
it
together,
Alaska!
[Reuters]

California Holds On Tight To Its Notoriously Difficult Bar Exam – Above the Law

(Image
via
Getty)

There
was
a
plan
for
California
to
provide
an
alternative
to
its
notoriously
difficult
bar
exam
(with
a
cut
score
40
points
above
the
national
average).
The

Portfolio
Bar
Exam
,
which
was
designed
similarly
to
the
Covid-era
Provisional
License
program,
would
have
allowed
law
school
graduates
to
bypass
the
bar
exam
instead
opting
to
shadow
experienced
attorneys
for
four
to
six
months
to
become
barred
in
the
state.

But
as
you
might
have
gleaned
from
the
past
tense
usage
(and
the
headline),
that
has
been
scrapped.
The
Supreme
Court
of
California

rejected

the
bar
exam
alt,
saying
it
would
cause
an
“array
of
ethical
and
practical
problems.”

As

reported
by

Reuters:

The
court
also
said
the
program
would
compromise
“fairness,
validity,
and
reliability
as
a
measure
of
an
applicant’s
competence.”
It
noted
that
applicants
placed
with
more
skilled
or
more
dedicated
supervisors
could
establish
better
portfolios
of
work
than
counterparts
with
“less
committed
supervisors.”

Despite
the
California
Supreme
Court’s
harsh
word
about
alternative
licensing
programs,
they
are,
in
fact,
trending.
Two
other
West
Coast
states,
Oregon
and
Washington,
have
already
approved
similar
programs
as
the
one
rejected
by
the
Golden
State.


Earlier
:

Oregon’s
Supreme
Court
Could
Greenlight
Hands-On
Bar
Exam
Replacement


Washington’s
Supreme
Court
Green-Lights
Three
Ways
To
Skip
The
Bar
Exam




Kathryn Rubino HeadshotKathryn
Rubino
is
a
Senior
Editor
at
Above
the
Law,
host
of

The
Jabot
podcast
,
and
co-host
of

Thinking
Like
A
Lawyer
.
AtL
tipsters
are
the
best,
so
please
connect
with
her.
Feel
free
to
email

her

with
any
tips,
questions,
or
comments
and
follow
her
on
Twitter

@Kathryn1
 or
Mastodon

@[email protected].

The FBI Has Apparently Spent A Year Trying To Crack NYC Mayor Eric Adams’s Personal Phone – Above the Law

(Photo
by
TIMOTHY
A.
CLARY/AFP
via
Getty
Images)

The
spectacular
collapse
of
the
Mayor
Adams’s
administration
is
still
in
progress.
Pretty
much
everyone
with
ties
to
the
ex-cop,
current
mayor
has
either
been
informed
of
an
ongoing
investigation
or
managed
to
infer
that

following
multiple
raids
by
the
FBI
.

The
mayor’s
handpicked
police
commissioner, Edward
Caban
,
resigned
shortly
after
these
raids
occurred,
most
likely
because
he
was
on
the
receiving
end
of
one
of
these
raids.
So
were
First
Deputy
Mayor
Sheena
Wright,
Deputy
Mayor
for
Public
Safety
Phil
Banks,
Phil
Banks’s
brother,
David
Banks,
who
is
the
schools
chancellor,
and
Timothy
Pearson,
the
mayor’s
adviser.

Edward
Caban
issued
“get
out
of
accountability
free”
missive
 to
the
NYPD
as
he
left
the
building.
He
was
replaced
by
former
FBI
Special
Agent
Michael
Donlon… whose
own
house
was also raided
by
the
FBI
.

In
the
middle
of
all
this
raiding
and
resigning,
the
Mayor’s
PR
people
came
forward
to
say
the
mayor
was
shocked,
shocked!
to
discover
there
might
be
some
sort
of
corruption-laden
city
government
with
himself
at
the
center
of
all
of
it.
The
issued
statement wasn’t
quite
the
exoneration
it
was
meant
to
be
:


“As
a
former
member
of
law
enforcement,
the
mayor
has
repeatedly
made
clear
that
all
members
of
the
team
need
to
follow
the
law.”

You
know
who
doesn’t
have
to
say
that
kind
of
thing
repeatedly?
Someone
who
oversees
a
bunch
of
people
who
have
expressed
no
interest
nor
engaged
in
acts
that
might
potentially
violate
the
law.
No
honest
politician/advisor/political
appointee/police
chief
needs
to
be
“repeatedly”
reminded
to
“follow
the
law.”
It
just
comes
naturally
to
most
people.

But
Mayor
Adams’s
people
are
not
most
people.
A
lot
of
them
are
also
former
cops.
Perhaps
that
explains
all
the
corruption.

Mayor
Adams
himself
isn’t
immune
to
this
ongoing
investigation.
In
fact,
he
experienced
his
own
personal
raid
a
year
before
the
onslaught
of
recent
raids
that
have
made
headlines
around
the
nation.
Now
that
the
mayor
is
under
indictment,
court
filings
are
starting
to
expose
a
lot
of
details
that
were
deliberately
kept
out
of
public
view
as
the
FBI
engaged
in
its
investigation.

One
of
those
details
is
the
fact
that
the
FBI
executed
a
search
warrant
targeting
multiple
phones
used
by
Mayor
Adams.
However,
his
personal
phone
was
not
among
those
seized.
A
subpoena
was
issued
ordering
the
mayor
to
turn
over
his
personal
phone
(which
is
alleged
to
be
the
device
the
mayor
used
to
“communicate
about
the
conduct
described
in
this
indictment”).
Mayor
Adams
complied.
Sort
of.
He
gave
the
FBI
his
phone.
What
he
didn’t
give
the
FBI
was
a
way
to
see
the
phone’s
contents, according
to
this
report
by
Gaby
Del
Valle
for
The
Verge
.


When
Adams
turned
in
his
personal
cellphone
the
following
day,
charging
documents
say,
he
said
he
had
changed
the
password
a
day
prior

after
learning
about
the
investigation

and
couldn’t
remember
it.

Sure
looks
like
an
attempt
to
withhold
and/or
destroy
evidence.
The
fact
that
this
happened
the
day after the
FBI
seized
the
mayor’s
other
phones
isn’t
going
to
work
out
well
for
him
in
court.
His
excuse

that
he
couldn’t
remember
it

is
no
more
believable
than
his
office’s
assertion
that
everyone
engaged
in
legal
behavior
because
they
were
repeatedly
told
not
to
violate
the
law.

But
both
of
those
statements
are far more
believable
than
the
mayor’s
explanation
of
the
post-FBI
visit
password
changing:


Adams
told
investigators
he
changed
the
password “to
prevent
members
of
his
staff
from
inadvertently
or
intentionally
deleting
the
contents
of
his
phone,”
the
indictment
alleges.

LOL

Keep
in
mind,
this
was
the
mayor’s personal phone.
Pretending
staffers
had
routine
and
easy
access
to
it
or
its
contents
beggars
belief.
And
the
simplest
way
to
prevent
staffers
from
“accidentally”
deleting
evidence
of
alleged
criminal
actions
would
be
to
maintain
possession
of
the
phone
on
your
person
or
throw
it
in
a
safe
or
lock
it
in
a
desk
drawer
or
do
literally
anything
other
than
change
a
password
and
immediately
“forget”
what
it
was.

Again,
none
of
this
is
going
to
reflect
well
on
the
mayor
as
he
faces
these
charges
in
court.
Any
judge
will
see
it
the
way
the
rest
of
us
see
it:
a
deliberate
attempt
to
thwart
a
federal
investigation.

Even
so,
let’s
hope
this
doesn’t
result
in
any
stupid
precedent
motivated
by
the
mayor’s
apparently
willful
attempt
to
obstruct
this
investigation.
There’s
some
potential
here
for
rulings
that
might
negatively
affect Fifth
Amendment
rights
 and/or
give
the
feds leverage
to
agitate
 for
compelled
assistance
from
phone
manufacturers.

Because
there’s
a
chance
it
might
do
any
of
these
things.
The
FBI
has
had
the
phone
for
a
long
time.
And
it
still
hasn’t
managed
to
access
its
contents.
The
FBI
insists
(without
supporting
evidence,
obviously)
that
this
is
a
BIG
DEAL
that
might
BREAK
THE
CASE.


During
a
federal
court
hearing,
prosecutor
Hagan
Scotten
said
the
FBI’s
inability
to
get
into
Adams’s
phone
is
a
“significant
wild
card,”
according
to
a
report
from

the New
York
Post
.

I
want
to
believe
that
might
be
true.
But
only
because
I
want
the
feds
to
deliver
a
ton
of
incriminating
evidence
that
takes
down
Mayor
Adams
and
anyone
else
in
his
administration
who
engaged
in
corruption.
On
the
other
hand,
the FBI
always
claims
 any phone
it
can’t
get
into
must
be
loaded
with
incriminating
evidence
capable
of
producing
slam-dunk
prosecutions.
The
FBI’s
anti-encryption
agitation
relies
on
its
fervent
belief
that
the
best
and
most
incriminating
evidence
is
always
found
on
encrypted
devices,
therefore
courts
should
force
companies
(or
accused
persons)
to
decrypt
the
contents
so
special
agents
can
open
and
close
investigations
without
ever
leaving
their
desks.

I’m
definitely
here
for
the
fallout.
I’m
guessing
these
raids
will
lead
to
a
string
of
resignations,
a
cooperating
witness
or
two,
and
a
few
wrist
slaps
for
ex-law
enforcement
officials.
But
if
someone’s
going
to
burn
for
this,
it
should
be
the
person
at
the
top
of
the
city
food
chain.
And
as
much
as
I’d
like
to
see
that
happen,
I’d
much
rather
it
was
accomplished
without
collateral
damage
to
Ccnstitutional
rights
or
the
security
and
privacy
provided
by
strong
encryption.


The
FBI
Has
Apparently
Spent
A
Year
Trying
To
Crack
NYC
Mayor
Eric
Adams’
Personal
Phone


Court
Reminds
Cops
That
Smelling
Decriminalized
Weed
Ain’t
The
Probable
Cause
It
Used
To
Be


The
Social
Media
Moral
Panic
Is
All
About
Confusing
Risks
&
Harms


Cloudflare
Destroys
Another
Patent
Troll,
Gets
Its
Patents
Released
To
The
Public

Morning Docket: 10.11.24 – Above the Law

Not
Olive
Garden
pasta
(via
Getty
Images)

*
Uh
oh…
SpaghettiOs:
Woman
arrested
after
cops
found
a
“suspicious
substance”
on
a
spoon
in
her
purse
during
a
routine
traffic
stop

it
was
canned
pasta
sauce.
[

Lowering
the
Bar
]

*
Respect
the
LinkedIn
hustle:
FTX
officer
updates
profile
to
reflect
prison
sentence.
[CNN]

*
What
this
tells
me
is
that
Roberts
is
still
very,
very

annoyed
with
the
Fifth
Circuit’s
nonsense
.
[National
Law
Journal
]

*
Speaking
of
forum
shopping:
“US
Appellate
Judge
Urges
Caution
on
Judge-Shopping
Rule.”
This
is
why,
unfortunately,
it’s
become
necessary
for
journalists
to
clarify
“TRUMP
Appellate
Judge
Urges
Caution
on
Judge-Shopping
Rule.”
Without
that
context,
this
news
story
reads
as
though
this
isn’t
a
wholly
partisan
stance.

*
The
thing
about
loser-pays
is
that
the
winners
can
rack
up
some
epic
mini-bar
charges
along
the
way.
[Roll
on
Friday
]

*
Nixon
Peabody
sues
personal
injury
firm.
[ABA
Journal
]

*
If
only
some
Supreme
Court
justices
cared
about
miscarriages
of
justice
as
much
as
they
care
about
jailing
women
after
a
miscarriage.
[Dorf
on
Law
]

*
Judge
Kindred
texted
with
former
clerk/inappropriate
relationship/prosecutor
about
a
case
as
he
presided
over
it.
This
is
distinct
from
the
senior
prosecutor
who
sent
the
judge
nude
photographs.
Get
it
together,
Alaska!
[Reuters]

Morning Docket: 10.11.24 – Above the Law

Not
Olive
Garden
pasta
(via
Getty
Images)

*
Uh
oh…
SpaghettiOs:
Woman
arrested
after
cops
found
a
“suspicious
substance”
on
a
spoon
in
her
purse
during
a
routine
traffic
stop

it
was
canned
pasta
sauce.
[

Lowering
the
Bar
]

*
Respect
the
LinkedIn
hustle:
FTX
officer
updates
profile
to
reflect
prison
sentence.
[CNN]

*
What
this
tells
me
is
that
Roberts
is
still
very,
very

annoyed
with
the
Fifth
Circuit’s
nonsense
.
[National
Law
Journal
]

*
Speaking
of
forum
shopping:
“US
Appellate
Judge
Urges
Caution
on
Judge-Shopping
Rule.”
This
is
why,
unfortunately,
it’s
become
necessary
for
journalists
to
clarify
“TRUMP
Appellate
Judge
Urges
Caution
on
Judge-Shopping
Rule.”
Without
that
context,
this
news
story
reads
as
though
this
isn’t
a
wholly
partisan
stance.

*
The
thing
about
loser-pays
is
that
the
winners
can
rack
up
some
epic
mini-bar
charges
along
the
way.
[Roll
on
Friday
]

*
Nixon
Peabody
sues
personal
injury
firm.
[ABA
Journal
]

*
If
only
some
Supreme
Court
justices
cared
about
miscarriages
of
justice
as
much
as
they
care
about
jailing
women
after
a
miscarriage.
[Dorf
on
Law
]

*
Judge
Kindred
texted
with
former
clerk/inappropriate
relationship/prosecutor
about
a
case
as
he
presided
over
it.
This
is
distinct
from
the
senior
prosecutor
who
sent
the
judge
nude
photographs.
Get
it
together,
Alaska!
[Reuters]