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Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 8, 2025

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is terminating parole protections for roughly 985,000 people who entered the United States through the CBP One app during the Biden administration. The app allowed individuals to make appointments at ports of entry to then seek asylum. The Hill reports that DHS has begun sending email notices to affected migrants telling them to self-deport through the Trump administration’s version of the app, now called CBP Home. Those who entered the country as part of the Uniting for Ukraine program and Afghans who entered under Operation Allies Welcome were not impacted by the action.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 8, 2025

TBA General, Solo, & Small Firm Section members are invited to a section networking happy hour event at East Nashville Beer Works in Nashville on April 22 from 5-7 p.m. CDT. While an RSVP is not required to attend, it does help to better track the expected number of guests. Thank you to Emma Elliott with Peregrine Law for sponsoring this event!

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 8, 2025

The Tennessee General Assembly is projected to adjourn for the year in mid- to late April, given that most legislative committees have already closed or are set to close within the week. The House and Senate Finance Ways and Means committees are meeting this week and next week to determine whether legislation that has been voted out of other committees with a fiscal note will be funded. Because the governor included $17 million for a new indigent representation plan in his budget amendment, the committees do not have to vote on whether to add that funding. However, at the end of session, the House and Senate leadership will meet and determine exactly which measures will be included in the final budget and how much the funding will be. The budget is the one piece of legislation that lawmakers constitutionally are required to pass before adjournment. Once the budget is approved, lawmakers will consider matters “behind the budget” that received funding, as well as other priority items. It is anticipated the session will adjourn a few days after that.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 8, 2025

Rocky McElhaney Law Firm has opened an office on Music Row at 1102 17th Ave. S., Nashville 37212. The opening of the office marks a return to Music Row for the Hendersonville-based firm after it ceased operations in 2017 on 16th Ave. S. after McElhaney’s Rock-N-Row Express LLC sold the building on that site for $3 million to First Citizens Bank and relocated its main office to Hendersonville. The firm specializes in legal work involving personal injury and wrongful death often related to vehicular incidences, and will continue to operate offices in Hendersonville, Murfreesboro and Clarksville. Read more from the Nashville Post.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 8, 2025

Following recent severe weather across the state, the Tennessee Attorney General’s Division of Consumer Affairs offers tips for those impacted by the storms, including addressing financial obligations, filing insurance claims, hiring contractors, tips for flooded vehicles, avoiding scams and how to report misconduct around price gouging. Read more in a press release.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 8, 2025

Vanderbilt University Law School has moved up five spots from 19 to 14 in the latest U.S. News & World Report rankings released Tuesday. New rankings for other Tennessee law schools include the University of Tennessee College of Law at 55 (down from 52 from last year), Belmont University College of Law at 84 (up from 91 last year), University of Memphis Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law at 146 (down from 140 last year), and Lincoln Memorial University Duncan School of Law at 169 (down from 165 last year). According to Reuters, the U.S. News rankings have traditionally been viewed as the single-most influential measure of the law schools among prospective students, but that may be on the decline. In a new survey of law school admissions officers by test prep company Kaplan, 62% said they believe the rankings “have lost some of their prestige over the last couple of years.” View the full list of rankings.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 8, 2025

Tennessee Sports Wagering Council (SWC) has announced new rules and regulations that will take effect June 30. The rules revisions strengthen player protections and build on ongoing efforts to eliminate fraudulent activity on wagering platforms. The rules also add multi-factor identification requirements for different account activities, define more responsible gaming terms, and put new conditions on the processes for voiding or canceling wagers, among other changes. “Making these rule changes is a staff-wide effort working with the industry and consumers to solicit feedback and constantly reevaluate what’s working and what could be improved, and we appreciate everyone who participated in this public process,” SWC Chair Billy Orgel said. Read more in a press release. The revisions have been approved by the Tennessee Attorney General’s Office and are posted on the SWC’s website and with the Secretary of State’s Office.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 2, 2025

Tennessee Attorney General (AG) Jonathan Skrmetti is alerting customers of genetic testing company 23andMe of their rights to download their personal data from their account, delete their account and instruct the company to destroy their biological sample and not use it for research purposes following the company’s bankruptcy filing. All of these options are protected under Tennessee’s Genetic Information Privacy Act (GIPA), which went into effect in July 2023, Skrmetti said in a press release. "Our genetic information is some of our most personal data, giving insight about not just us but our families,” he said.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 1, 2025

A 36-year-old Shelby County Jail inmate, Courtney Berry, was discovered "unresponsive in a restroom" Sunday morning, according to a statement from the Shelby County Sheriff's Office to the Commercial Appeal. "Lifesaving measures were taken by staff members and Memphis Fire Department paramedics," the sheriff's office said in a statement. "A pre-existing medical condition may have played a part in the event." The investigation into Berry's death is ongoing. He was arrested without bond while a petition by state prosecutors to revoke his suspended sentence was pending. He previously had been convicted of criminal attempt to possess a firearm while being a convicted felon. Berry's death is at least the fifth so far this year. In early February, four inmates died within a week.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 1, 2025

One week after Tennessee's Republican U.S. Sens. Marsha Blackburn and Bill Hagerty wrote an op-ed calling for the Tennessee Valley Authority's (TVA) board to be replaced, President Donald Trump fired Michelle Moore from the TVA Board of Directors. Moore was dismissed on March 27, according to a March 28 filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. All five members of the board, down from six after Moore's termination, were nominated by President Joe Biden and confirmed to five-year terms by the U.S. Senate. Three members, who were nominated by President Trump during his first term, rolled off after their terms expired. The board needs five of its nine members to conduct business. In other news, TVA announced on Monday that Chief Operating Officer Don Moul would succeed Jeff Lyash as CEO on April 9 following Lyash's retirement. Knox News has the story


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