TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Dec 21, 2023
News Type: BPR Actions

The Tennessee Supreme Court recently reinstated 12 lawyers to the practice of law who had been suspended for failing to complete annual continuing legal education requirements in 2023. One was reinstated for failing to complete requirements in 2021. View all administrative suspensions and reinstatements here.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Dec 21, 2023
News Type: BPR Actions

The Tennessee Supreme Court yesterday suspended 20 attorneys for failure to pay the annual registration fee; 16 of them also failed to file proof that client funds are held in an IOLTA-compliant account. View the fee suspension order and IOLTA suspension order. See the list of all lawyers suspended and reinstated for fee and IOLTA violations in 2023 or access all administrative suspensions dating back to 2005.

Posted by: Paul Burch on Dec 21, 2023
News Type: Passages

Brentwood attorney Oscar B. Hofstetter III died Dec. 7, 2023, at the age of 82. A native Nashvillian, Hofstetter attended Father Ryan High School, Vanderbilt University, University of Tennessee and Nashville School of Law. He entered the family law firm of Hofstetter & Hofstetter where he practiced until he retired. Hofstetter was active in several groups, including the Collectors of Moon and Stars Pattern Glass Society, Sons of the American Revolution and Sons of the Confederate Veterans. A memorial service will be held Friday at East Brentwood Presbyterian Church, 9000 Concord Rd., Brentwood, 37027 at 11 a.m. CST. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the church.

Posted by: Paul Burch on Dec 21, 2023
News Type: Legal News

Tennessee released letter grades for every public K-12 school in the state on Thursday, with more than a quarter receiving Ds or Fs under a controversial new grading system, reports the Tennessean. Schools that receive a D or F may be asked to appear before the State Board of Education which could order corrective plans or academic and financial audits. Technical issues with testing and disruptions during the coronavirus pandemic delayed the report, first enacted by 2016 legislation. Opponents of the grading system say it is overly simplistic and does not "capture the hard work of Tennessee students and educators." Advocates say letter grades are a simpler, more transparent way for parents to understand school performance. 

Posted by: Paul Burch on Dec 21, 2023
News Type: Upcoming

Judge Tarik B. Sugarmon of the Juvenile Court of Memphis and Shelby County will serve as guest speaker for Dyersburg State Community College’s annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Community Luncheon at noon, Jan. 12, 2024, at Dyersburg State Community College inside the Learning Resource Center (LRC) Sells Family Lobby. The event will be co-hosted by the Dyersburg/Dyer County Chamber of Commerce. Tickets for the luncheon are $20 each and must be purchased in advance by Jan. 10 at the Dyersburg/Dyer County Chamber of Commerce or the DSCC One Stop located in the Student Center at the Dyersburg campus. For more information regarding the event, contact Edith Carlton at 731-286-3300 or carlton@dscc.edu.

Posted by: Paul Burch on Dec 21, 2023
News Type: Legal News

A group of 11 nonfiction authors joined a lawsuit in Manhattan federal court alleging copyright violations by OpenAI and Microsoft when training the models behind ChatGPT and other artificial-intelligence based software, reports Reuters. The writers, including Pulitzer Prize winners Taylor Branch and Kai Bird, co-writer of the J. Robert Oppenheimer biography adapted into the 2023 film, told the court Tuesday the companies used their work to train OpenAI's language models. "The defendants are raking in billions from their unauthorized use of nonfiction books, and the authors of these books deserve fair compensation and treatment for it," the writers' attorney said on Wednesday. The case is one of several brought by copyright owners against OpenAI including authors John Grisham, George R.R. Martin and Jonathan Franzen.

Posted by: Paul Burch on Dec 21, 2023
News Type: Legal News, Upcoming

The TBA will be closed Friday and Monday in observance of the Christmas holiday. We will reopen Tuesday at 8 a.m. CST. Online CLE programming will remain available throughout the holidays.

Posted by: Chelsea Bennett on Dec 21, 2023
News Type: TBA CLE

Join us for our continuing Law Tech Lunch & Learn Series in Nashville Feb. 7 at Belmont College of Law with a focus on Artificial Intelligence (AI). Guest speakers William Ramsey and Phillip Hampton will cover the history of AI’s evolution in the legal tech industry and the benefits, limitations and pitfalls to avoid. Registration/check-in/lunch will begin at 11:30 a.m. CST. Find out more and register.

Posted by: Paul Burch on Dec 21, 2023

The Tennessee Board of Judicial Conduct ordered that Shelby County Criminal Court Judge A. Melissa Boyd is suspended effective Dec. 14. During this suspension, Boyd is prohibited from exercising any judicial power or authority. This suspension will remain effective until further order from the court.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Dec 20, 2023
News Type: Legal News

A conservative legal advocacy group has sued the State Bar of Wisconsin, claiming its diversity fellowship program for law students violates the free speech rights of bar members whose dues are used to fund it, according to Reuters. The lawsuit, filed by the Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty yesterday on behalf of a Wisconsin attorney, is the latest in a series of legal challenges to diversity programs after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June that colleges and universities cannot consider race in admissions. The attorney claims he should not have to pay for the program because it is unconstitutional and not germane to the core functions of the bar. The state bar responded saying it will "vigorously defend" the diversity program.


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