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Posted by: Kate Prince & Jarod Word on May 12, 2022

The TBA Criminal Justice Section next week will present a CLE like you’ve never experienced before. The CL(U)E event is an interactive adventure where you and a team of fellow lawyers will solve a murder mystery using information about recent changes to Tennessee criminal law. The event will take place on May 20 at 12:30 p.m. CDT at various landmarks across downtown Nashville, including, the Ryman, Polk’s Tomb, St. Mary of the Seven Sorrows and The Hermitage Hotel. Participants will use clues involving new laws to progress to the next stations. Covered in the event are changes related to DUIs, drug offenses, burglary, homicide and more. Participants can earn up to three hours of CLE credit and prizes will be awarded to the first three winning teams. Participation is limited, so register today before you miss this CLE event.

Posted by: Kate Prince on May 11, 2022

Throughout the last several weeks, #TeamTBA has highlighted the TBA CLE crew. Now it's time to meet their manager, Jennifer Vossler! As the TBA Director of Education & Professional Development, Jennifer leads her team in providing TBA members with the best CLE courses, education and professional opportunities. Aside from her CLE talents, she can sing virtually any Disney song on command, thanks largely in part to her two-year-old daughter, Emily!

The #TeamTBA series offers members a behind-the-scenes look at the inner workings of the TBA and how each staff members makes the association run. Check back every Wednesday for a new staff profile in TBA Today and on the TBA's Facebook, Twitter and Instagram accounts.

Posted by: Kate Prince on May 10, 2022

The Nashville Predators hockey team has awarded a $5,000 grant to the 23rd Judicial District Recovery Court to provide bicycles, tricycles and ride-on toys for the children of Recovery Court participants. The court, which serves Cheatham, Dickson, Houston, Humphreys and Stewart counties, is presided over by Circuit and Recovery Court Judge Suzanne Lockert-Mash. “We appreciate the Nashville Predators for giving us the means to teach important parenting skills,” Lockert-Mash said. “Simple things like teaching a child to ride a bike or tricycle creates a bond between parents and their children.” Read more here.  

Posted by: Kate Prince on May 10, 2022

Knoxville’s Lincoln Memorial University Duncan School of Law is seeking applications for an Assistant Dean for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion to begin July 1. The new position is envisioned as a key leadership role at LMU Law and would collaborate closely with the dean, other law school and university leaders, students, faculty, and staff to develop, promote, and facilitate LMU Law’s strategic goals and concrete actions to forward progress in diversity, equity and inclusion. Inquiries and letters of interest may be sent to Melissa Montroy or submitted electronically. Applications will be accepted until May 31. Read more about the position on TBA’s JobLink page.

Posted by: Kate Prince on May 10, 2022

Davidson County Criminal Court Judge Monte Watkins today vacated the conviction of Claude Francis Garrett who in 1992 was found guilty of murdering his girlfriend, Lori Lee Lance, the Tennessean reports. Lance died in a Nashville house fire that Garrett was accused of intentionally starting. The dismissal comes after reports and testimony by witnesses for the Innocence Project and the Davidson County District Attorney’s Conviction Review Unit, that said the fire was not intentionally set. The DA’s office in a statement today said Garrett’s original conviction was "based on outdated investigative methods and baseless conclusions.” In his ruling vacating the conviction, Watkins wrote that Garrett has shown “actual innocence” and would not have been convicted by a jury “in light of the new scientific evidence.”

Posted by: Kate Prince on May 10, 2022

Law books from the judge’s chambers at the Estes Kefauver Federal Building U.S. Courthouse in downtown Nashville are seeking a new home. If you are interested in reserving the books, contact Hardi Ibrahim. More pictures of the books can be found here

Posted by: Kate Prince on May 10, 2022

A joint investigation into the Rutherford County juvenile justice system by Nashville public radio station WPLN and nonprofit newsroom ProPublica has been named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize’s feature writing category. WPLN’s Meribah Knight and ProPublica’s Ken Armstrong shed light on the county’s juvenile justice system in which children were being illegally arrested and jailed under a judge who had the highest rate of locking up children in the state. The reporters discovered that the county was jailing children in 48% of the cases referred to juvenile court, versus the statewide average of 5%. A follow up investigation revealed the county was jailing a disproportionately high percentage of Black children. WPLN has more on the story.

Posted by: Kate Prince on May 10, 2022

Testing sites for the July 2022 bar exam in Knoxville and Memphis are at capacity and the Nashville location is near capacity, according to an order issued today by the Tennessee Supreme Court. The order says that bar exam applications will close once the Nashville site hits max capacity. Those who have submitted a paid application will have until May 20 to complete the application process. If there are more applications than available seats, those without a seat will be placed on a waiting list. If no seat becomes available by June 15, applicants without a seat will be refunded and withdrawn from the exam. Read more about the situation and the court's order.

Posted by: Kate Prince on May 10, 2022

Retired Court of Appeals Judge Charles D. Susano Jr. died on May 7. He was 86. Susano was in private practice for 30 years before being appointed to the Court of Appeals by former Gov. Ned McWherter in 1994. Susano remained on the bench for more than 25 years. At the time of his retirement in April 2020, he was the longest serving appellate judge in Tennessee, authoring more than 1,000 opinions and serving as chief judge of the Court of Appeals from 2013 to 2015. For the last 30 years, Susano was confined to a wheelchair after a sleepwalking accident left him paralyzed from the waist down. “I’m only handicapped if I let myself be,” Susano once said. “At worst, I have been challenged, forcing me to reinvent new ways to negotiate the new times.” Susano’s family will receive friends on May 16 from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. EDT at at the Cathedral Hall at Sacred Heart in Knoxville. A funeral mass will be held on May 17 at 10 a.m. EDT at the Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus. The Administrative Office of the Courts has more on where the public may make donations in Susano’s honor.

Posted by: Kate Prince on May 10, 2022

The U.S. Senate yesterday approved a bipartisan bill to boost security for Supreme Court justices to ensure their families are protected, the Associated Press reports. The measure does not provide additional funding for security, but makes a technical change that allows law enforcement to provide round-the-clock security to immediate family members of the justices. The bill comes amid protests around the country over a leaked draft opinion that suggests the high court is poised to overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade decision. The measure now heads to the U.S. House for consideration.


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