Her other requests include a white noise machine, a computer and permission to bring food and drink to the test.
Tagged with: LSAT
Read More »Her other requests include a white noise machine, a computer and permission to bring food and drink to the test.
Tagged with: LSAT
Read More »Soukeye Samb Fox had faced a maximum sentence of two years on one charge of violating U.S. intellectual property laws.
Tagged with: Frison
Read More »Thanks to Missouri native and new American Bar Association President Jim Silkenat, the ABA’s Board of Governors will meet in Kansas City next summer for the first time in 20 years.
Tagged with: American Bar Association
Read More »A settlement forestalled a trial set for August in the legal malpractice case a dentist filed against defunct law firm Gallop, Johnson & Neuman.
Tagged with: Gallop Johnson & Neuman
Read More »Enterprise Bank & Trust has settled a lawsuit filed over the $56 million Ponzi scheme perpetrated by St. Louis cleric and lawyer Martin Sigillito.
Tagged with: Martin Sigillito
Read More »Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. is suing Schnuck Markets Inc. in U.S. District Court in St. Louis.
Tagged with: Chris Koster Schnucks
Read More »A prosecutor and defense attorney today gave dueling portrayals of investment adviser David Wulf in a criminal case over a prepaid funeral services scheme.
Tagged with: National Prearranged Services Inc.
Read More »For all those who complain that law school doesn’t give a foundation in the business end of running a law practice, Husch Blackwell and Washington University have come up with an answer for some of the firm’s attorneys.
Read More »At one point, U.S. Senior District Judge Jean Hamilton called a recess when financial adviser David Wulf choked up and was unable to answer his attorney’s question about his family’s health.
Tagged with: David Wulf
Read More »Demand hasn’t kept up with law firm spending in the first half of the year, according to a Citi Private Bank review of 172 firms.
Read More »The company set up a $95,150 settlement fund to the 87 recipients of a fax offering to “help all you procrastinators!” sent in March and April 2010. The federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act bans the sending of unsolicited or “junk” faxes.
Read More »