TBA Law Blog


2,124 Posts found
Previous • Page 140 of 213 • Next
Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 28, 2024
News Type: Legal News

This semester, Lincoln Memorial University's Duncan School of Law is offering the Police Law, Policy and Practices seminar for upper-level law students. The seminar is offered in collaboration with four other American Bar Association (ABA) Legal Education and Police Practices Consortium member law schools: Memphis, Penn State Dickinson, Quinnipiac and Roger Williams. Fifty students from all five law schools are enrolled in the course. Approximately 40 law enforcement officers are scheduled to participate, including several officers from the Knoxville Police Department.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 28, 2024
News Type: Legal News

Longtime University of Memphis Law Professor William Kratzke has announced he will retire at the end of this academic year. He has been on the faculty of the law school since 1979, serving in various roles including interim dean. Kratzke has taught tax law courses for several decades, as well as courses in trademarks, torts, civil procedure, world trade law, economic analysis and more. He was instrumental in helping the law school become an annual site for the IRS' Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program. Read the full announcement.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 28, 2024
News Type: Legal News

A new episode of the TBA's BarBuzz podcast is available! Our guest this month is Ellen Hobbs Lyle, who is a mediator, arbitrator and neutral evaluator for JAMS-alternative dispute resolution. Prior to joining JAMS, Lyle had a distinguished 27-year career as a chancery court judge in Nashville for the 20th Judicial District of Tennessee. A native Nashvillian, Lyle has long-standing ties to and knowledge of the Nashville community. Lyle is joined for this episode by TBA's Executive Director Sheree Wright.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 28, 2024

Tennessee House of Representatives Speaker Cameron Sexton, R-Crossville, and Lt. Gov. Randy McNally, R-Oak Ridge, each appointed five-member committees to consider removing Shelby County Criminal Court Division 9 Judge Melissa Boyd, which the Board of Judicial Conduct recommended in a Jan. 26 letter to the leaders. The Daily Memphian reports that removal is not an impeachment, which would begin with a vote by the House and proceed with a trial in the Senate. She would be removed with two-thirds votes by both the House and the Senate, but she would not be banned from running for reelection. Impeachment and conviction would prohibit her from running for office again with a two-thirds vote by the Senate.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 28, 2024
News Type: Legal News

Jason Autry, a key witness whose testimony helped convict Zachary Adams of Holly Bobo's murder in 2017, is now recanting his testimony. The Associated Press reports that Autry’s reversal was revealed in two petitions seeking post-conviction relief filed by Adams’ lawyer in Hardin County, where the trial took place. Adams, 39, wants his conviction thrown out based on Autry’s latest statements.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 28, 2024

A bill sponsored by Sen. Brent Taylor, R-Eads, and Rep. John Gillespie, R-Memphis seeks transparency from progressive criminal-justice reform groups that work with local district attorneys. SB2561/HB2618 would require those groups, and other nonprofits that have contracts or memoranda of understanding with prosecutors, to disclose all of their donors from the previous calendar year, reports the Daily Memphian. “These restorative-justice outfits have an outsized role in our district attorney’s office," Taylor said in a committee hearing. They "are fundamentally changing how our judicial system operates in Shelby County.” Sen. Jeff Yarbro, D-Nashville, said he supported greater transparency for nonprofits working with governments but noted that the 2021 Personal Privacy Protection Act protects donors to all nonprofits. The act says state agencies cannot “require an entity exempt from federal income tax under § 501(c) of the Internal Revenue Code to provide the names or other personal information of persons who have provided financial or nonfinancial support to the exempt entity."

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 28, 2024
News Type: Legal News

The American Bar Association (ABA) Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility has released a formal opinion that provides guidance on how disqualification rules apply to both current and former government lawyers' representation of private clients under the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct. Formal Opinion 509 interprets Model Rule 1.11, which relates to the conflict-of-interest provisions covering confidential government information. The opinion states that the rule continues to apply "regardless of whether the lawyer seeking to represent the private client has now left government employ or office or maintains a private law practice (e.g., a part-time practice) while still in government employ or office."

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 28, 2024
News Type: Upcoming

Join your colleagues March 6 at noon CST for a free TBA webinar that will address fundamental rules and best practices for ensuring that an appellate record is complete and suitable for the appellate courts in Tennessee. Attendees will learn about preserving issues for appeal, making sure crucial evidence as well as narrative background facts are properly admitted, and designating matters for inclusion in the appellate record. Learn more and register here.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 26, 2024
News Type: Legal News

A University of Memphis Law School Duberstein Bankruptcy Team of Alexandra Nabity, Carson Klepzig and Alton Smith won the Sixth Circuit's Shapero Cup Regional Duberstein Competition. Nabity also won the award for Best Oral Advocate. They will go on to compete in New York at the National Duberstein Competition. A second team consisting of Elizabeth Hunt, Tarik Terry and Olivia Cox made it to the semifinal round. See photos from the event. Additionally, the law school's Trial Law Team made it to the final round of regionals at the National Trial Competition in Birmingham. That team consists of Peyton Barrow, Annika Rush, Kelsey McClain, Cody Tolbert, Ciana Charity and Mary Cano. See photos from the event.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 26, 2024
News Type: BPR Actions

The Supreme Court of Tennessee today suspended Cleveland attorney Kent Thomas Jones from the practice of law for 90 days pursuant to Tenn. Sup. Ct. R. 9, § 12.2. The court found that Jones sent threatening and/or derogatory emails to his client and opposing counsel in two separate matters, that he failed to properly maintain client funds in a trust account and failed to satisfy a lien obligation in a timely manner from which his client suffered actual harm. His actions were determined to violate Tennessee Rules of Professional Conduct 1.3, 1.15, 4.4, 8.4(a) and 8.4(d).


Previous • Page 140 of 213 • Next