TBA Law Blog


4,036 Posts found
Previous • Page 325 of 404 • Next
Posted by: Brittany Sims on Apr 25, 2013
News Type: Legal News

Matthew P. Stephens has been appointed as an assistant district attorney general for the 23rd Judicial District, the Tennessean reports. He was sworn in Monday by Judge Robert E. Burch and will take on the prosecution of Drug Task Force cases in Cheatham, Dickson, Houston, Humphreys and Stewart counties in his new role. A graduate of the University of Tennessee and the Cumberland School of Law at Samford University, Stephens has prior experience in private practice and with the Davidson County District Attorney’s office.

Posted by: Brittany Sims on Apr 25, 2013
News Type: Legal News

Circuit Judge John McAfee has dismissed a $750,00 libel lawsuit against Republican Sen. Stacey Campfield for publishing false information online about state House Democratic candidate Roger Byrge in 2008. Campfield wrote that Byrge, who later lost the race to Republican Chad Faulkner by fewer than 400 votes, had multiple drug arrests. Although McAfee acknowledged that Campfield had gotten information wrong on his blog, he agreed with defense attorneys that the lawmaker did not know the information was false when he posted it. "Sometimes you just get beat, and that's just the plain simple truth of the matter," McAfee said. He added: "Politics are politics, and it's a big boys and big girls game. That's just the way it is." Knoxnews has the story.

Posted by: Brittany Sims on Apr 25, 2013
News Type: Legal News

Elections in Davidson County in 2012 were “marred by a series of avoidable errors and violations of law” that undermined the credibility of the voting process, according to a draft of a state review obtained by the Tennessean. The mistakes ranged from failing to open up early voting on a Saturday -- a mistake that cost two county election chiefs their jobs in 2010 -- to recruiting a partisan poll watcher from Maury County to operate voting machines at an understaffed polling place on election day. A recent Metro audit of the Davidson County Election Commission’s operations was more positive than the state review, generally giving the commission and its administrator Albert Tieche good marks for both election procedures and financial management.

Posted by: Brittany Sims on Apr 25, 2013

The cutoff date to reserve your room at the TBA Convention host hotel Sheraton Nashville Downtown is May 19. Booking a room within the TBA block ensures you will receive the special discounted Tennessee Bar Association rate of $155 when making your room reservations. Booking now also is an important way to support the event and keep overall meeting costs as low as possible.

Posted by: Brittany Sims on Apr 24, 2013
News Type: Legal News

In an opinion piece for the Tennessean, political journalist Jeff Wilson explains how a 1978 vote often cited as rejecting the Tennessee Plan was not really about the state's current method for picking appellate judges. According to Wilson, the 1978 constitutional amendment would have dramatically reshaped every aspect of the state judiciary, with merit selection as a side issue. The Modified Missouri Plan used during the late1970s was the model for merit selection in the constitutional amendment. The current Tennessee Plan wasn’t created until the 1990’s and improved the merit portion of merit selection, Wilson writes.

Posted by: Brittany Sims on Apr 24, 2013
News Type: Legal News

Charges were dropped Tuesday against Elvis impersonator Paul Kevin Curtis over suspected ricin-laced letters reportedly sent to President Barack Obama, a U.S senator from Mississippi and a state-court judge, the ABA Journal reports. Cutis’ lawyer Christi McCoy said he may have been framed. "The searches are concluded, not one single shred of evidence was found to indicate Kevin could have done this," she told reporters. In an interview with CNN, Curtis expressed his happiness over being vindicated and topped off the interview by  serenading his attorney with a Randy Travis song

Posted by: Brittany Sims on Apr 24, 2013
News Type: Legal News

The Humane Society of the United States is pressuring Gov. Bill Haslam to veto legislation that would require people catching animal abuse on camera to hand over those images to law enforcement within 48 hours, the Nashville City paper reports. The Tennessee Coalition for Open Government and the Tennessee Association of Broadcasters are also opposed to the bill, arguing that it has implications for journalists and penalizes whistleblowers.

Posted by: Brittany Sims on Apr 24, 2013
News Type: Legal News

At-large Metro Nashville Councilwoman Megan Barry began preparing for her 2015 mayoral run by appointing attorney Leigh Walton as treasurer. Walton, a member of Bass, Berry & Sims, served as Mayor Karl Dean’s treasurer during both of his campaigns. Although she has not formally announced her candidacy, Barry confirmed she has also hired one campaign staff member, calling it the “necessary legal steps to start raising money and building an organization … This is a complex and expensive undertaking,” she said. “There’s a lot involved in ramping up a mayoral campaign and the time is right for me to get started.” The Tennessean has the story.

Posted by: Brittany Sims on Apr 24, 2013

The Guide to Expert Witness Forum 2013 will provide practical, applicable insight from both attorneys and experts regarding how to maximize the effectiveness of expert testimony in your cases. Procedural issues including Rule 26 disclosures, relevant Rules of Evidence, discovery, scope of testimony, and raising and defending challenges to qualifications will be addressed in this Nashville CLE program, along with the practical questions of how to identify and ultimately choose potential experts. The May 1 program will also feature experts of various fields with an opportunity for participants to ask questions during expert panel sessions.

Posted by: Brittany Sims on Apr 24, 2013
News Type: Legal News

The Justice Department formally filed suit against cyclist Lance Armstrong and his company, Tailwind Sports, for approximately $40 million that the U.S. Postal Service spent to sponsor the cycling team from 1998 to 2004. In the wake of Armstrong’s doping confession, the government charges that the use of prohibited drugs constitutes a break of contract with the Postal Service. CNN Justice reports that the government could recover triple the amount of the sponsorship under the False Claims Act, which could bring a total of more than $100 million in damages.


Previous • Page 325 of 404 • Next