News Headlines

High Court Finds Lawyers and Their Advice Covered by Bankruptcy Reform Law

Consumer bankruptcy lawyers are "debt relief agencies" under a 2005 federal bankruptcy law and restrictions on the type of advice they can give clients are constitutional, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on Monday. In a challenge brought by a Minnesota law firm, the justices unanimously held that the plain language of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act clearly indicates that lawyers function as debt relief agencies when they provide bankruptcy help to consumers covered by the law.

Poll Shows Public Support for Cameras at the High Court

A new public opinion poll being released today found that more than 60 percent of voters think that televising U.S. Supreme Court proceedings would be "good for democracy." The poll, conducted by PublicMind, also indicates that more than half of voters believe that Supreme Court justices, who currently enjoy life tenure, should be limited to 18 years on the bench. The Supreme Court has clung to its long-standing opposition to cameras despite a steady but generally low-intensity campaign to change its mind.

GM Battles to Withhold Safety Secrets

It's a potentially explosive lawsuit focusing on the safety record of a major automaker. And it has nothing to do with Toyota. A small army of defense lawyers for once-mighty General Motors is battling in Connecticut court to seal court documents that indicate that poorly designed seat backs may have led to numerous deaths and injuries. Those documents were from a Philadelphia case that involved a woman who was killed in an accident involving a GM-made vehicle.

Firms Slow to Awaken to Cybersecurity Threat

A recent report concluded law firms -- attractive targets because they maintain sensitive client data -- are being targeted by sophisticated and well-funded teams of cyberattackers. But firms don't often realize they've been infiltrated and rarely go public with security breaches.

Snell & Wilmer in Phoenix Spins Off Sports Agency

As a corporate and finance attorney at Phoenix-based Snell & Wilmer, Travis Leach occasionally represents sports industry figures -- often with their side businesses or other ventures. Those industry connections were the genesis for Snell's newest subsidiary: a sports agency called Athlete Management Professionals. Major firms often represent professional athletes, but it's unusual for one to open its own stand-alone sports agency, said Leach, who is running the venture with five other Snell attorneys.

Class Action Lawsuits Could Cost Toyota More Than $3 Billion

Toyota owners claiming that massive safety recalls are causing the value of their vehicles to plummet have filed at least 89 class action lawsuits that could cost the Japanese auto giant $3 billion or more, according to an Associated Press review of cases, legal precedent and interviews with experts. Those estimates do not include potential payouts for wrongful death and injury lawsuits, which could reach in the tens of millions each.

Mayo Clinic and Doctor Disagree Over Who Stole Software Secrets

Chief Justice Recuses in New Wyeth Case

The Supreme Court on Monday announced it was granting review in Bruesewitz v. Wyeth, a test of the scope of the pre-emption provision of the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986. It also noted that Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. "took no part" in the decision to take the case. Though the justices almost never reveal their reasons for recusal, this one is almost certainly based on Roberts' stock ownership in Pfizer, which also became an issue in last year's landmark pre-emption case Wyeth v. Levine.

Weil Posts Flat Revenue, Slight Rise in Profits

Weil, Gotshal & Manges reported flat 2009 gross revenue and a modest uptick in profits per partner Monday. The results are slightly surprising given the firm's strong bankruptcy practice last year, but executive partner Barry Wolf said that other parts of the firm suffered from the economic downturn. According to the firm, gross revenue rose just .18 percent, from $1,230,801,620 in 2008 to $1,233,054,282 in 2009. Revenue per lawyer dropped by about 1.6 percent, while profits per equity partner rose by 1.8 percent.

Juror's Trash Talk About Lawyers Leads to Mistrial

A New Jersey trial judge did the right thing in vacating a cocaine conviction based on a juror's comment that "defense attorneys can be assholes," an appeals court says. Burlington City, N.J., police officer John Fine, a prosecution witness in the case, said a juror uttered those words to him in a courthouse elevator. Fine immediately told a detective in the prosecutor's office but the detective waited until after the verdict to tell the prosecutor, who told the judge.

Greenberg Traurig Terminates Partner Facing Theft-of-Services Charges

Mark McCombs, a government affairs partner in the Chicago office of Greenberg Traurig, was arrested at home and charged Friday by state prosecutors in Illinois with bilking more than $1 million from a Chicago suburb through inflated legal bills, according to a report in the Chicago Tribune. In a statement released late Friday, Greenberg Traurig said "upon learning of these charges, the law firm severed connections" with McCombs and is fully cooperating with the investigation.

Judge Chastises McKesson Exec's Defense Team but Reins In Prosecution

Former McKesson HBOC Chairman Charles McCall, the last defendant to be sentenced in a lengthy case involving cooked books at the company, got 10 years for securities fraud Friday, considerably less than prosecutors sought. Federal Judge William Alsup complimented lawyers on both sides for superb work but rapped McCall's defense team for trying to keep McCall out of prison pending appeal and dinged the defense for failing to preserve objections during trial.

How to Get Attorneys to Read Something: E-Mail Them Telling Them Not to

According to a lawyer with Fowler White Burnett, the firm recently e-mailed all its attorneys, telling them not to read a Daily Business Review article that detailed a juicy lawsuit filed against the firm and Lilly Ann Sanchez, head of the firm's white-collar division and a former federal prosecutor. The apparent result of the e-mail: just the opposite of what the firm intended.

Supreme Court Puts High-Emotion Funeral Protest Case on Docket

Few recent confrontations have stirred as much emotion and debate as the spate of protests conducted at funerals for U.S. soldiers killed in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Supreme Court has agreed to take up a hot-button First Amendment dispute involving members of the Topeka, Kan., Westboro Baptist Church who, seeking to spread the word that God is punishing America for its acceptance of homosexuality, have shown up at funerals with signs carrying messages such as "Thank God for Dead Soldiers" and "God Hates You."