TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jan 21, 2025
News Type: Passages

Miller Bruce Sullivan died Jan. 15 at age 25. A Knoxville native, he graduated from the University of Tennessee Knoxville with a degree in political science and religious studies, going on to law school at Washington and Lee University in Virginia. In October, he celebrated passing the Tennessee Bar Exam and joined the Cole Law Group in Brentwood. Visitation will be from 1-3 p.m. EST on Jan. 25, at Fountain City Presbyterian Church, 500 Hotel Rd., Knoxville 37918, followed by a memorial service at 3 p.m. The memorial service will be livestreamed on the church's Facebook page. In lieu of flowers, the family requests donations to either UT UKirk Campus Ministry or The National Epilepsy Foundation.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jan 21, 2025
News Type: TBA CLE

Save the date for TBA's 29th Annual Labor & Employment Forum set for May 2 at the Tennessee Bankers Association in Nashville. Speakers will include Heather Collins, John Edwin Gerth, Greg Grisham and Mark Travis. Visit the TBA website for more information and to register.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jan 17, 2025
News Type: Legal News

Longtime Knoxville criminal defense attorney Wade Davies has opened The Davies Law Firm. He is joined by associate attorney Georgia Miller and paralegal Meghan Franklin. The firm will focus on federal and state criminal defense, white collar investigations and defense, and BPR matters. Their office is located at 800 S Gay St #700, Knoxville 37929 and can be reached at (865) 686-6333 or online at wadedavies.law. Davies is a member of the Tennessee Bar Journal editorial board and the criminal law columnist for Journal.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jan 17, 2025
News Type: Legal News

Combining the disciplines of history and law, Memphis attorney Bryce Ashby and Rhodes College history professor Michael J. LaRosa in a new book explore the economic and historical challenges present in each Latin American nation that force "out" migration. "Immigration, Policy and the People of Latin America: Seven Sending Nations" unpacks the contemporary socio/political and economic realities of the seven sending nations — Colombia, Cuba, Haiti, Honduras, Guatemala, Mexico and Venezuela — and explains the complexity of immigration laws (as passed by Congress), executive actions taken by individual presidents in the United States, and some state initiatives. Read an interview with the authors and Chapter 16.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jan 16, 2025
News Type: Upcoming

Memphis events scheduled to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr.'s life and legacy include Volunteer Memphis' 2025 MLK Days of Service, which will take place between Jan. 16-20 and include a health and wellness fair and a community clean up. King Day at the National Civil Rights Museum will be celebrated on Jan. 20 with free admission to the site. This year’s celebration also will mark the launch of the museum’s yearlong observance themed Community Over Chaos, highlighting pivotal anniversaries in civil rights history, including the 60th anniversary year of the Selma March and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Also on Monday, the Memphis Grizzlies, National Civil Rights Museum, City of Memphis and Shelby County will host the 23rd Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration Game, including a panel on the intersection of race and sport.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jan 16, 2025
News Type: Upcoming

Monday, Jan. 20, is Martin Luther King Jr. Day, and several Nashville organizations are hosting events, volunteer opportunities and celebrations of life. The 40th Annual Nashville MLK Day celebration includes a youth symposium and intergenerational panel on Saturday, and a march along Jefferson Street and a convocation at Tennessee State University with author and professor Dr. Daniel Black. Get details on the MLK Joint Day of Service on Saturday, MLK: A Celebration in Song with Mickey Guyton and the Nashville Symphony on Sunday, and a screening of the film "A Better Way: James Lawson, Architect of Nonviolence" at Vanderbilt University.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jan 14, 2025
News Type: Legal News

Knox County District Attorney Charme Allen on Monday announced that two Knoxville police officers were justified in the shooting of Christopher Arons in late 2024 after Arons charged at them holding an axe. According to KnoxNews, Allen wrote that she had reviewed evidence collected by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation and the "force utilized in this incident amounted to a necessary response to thwart the threat involved." Arons survived the shooting and is charged with aggravated assault, domestic assault and vandalism.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jan 14, 2025
News Type: Legal News

Davidson County Chancellor Anne Martin on Monday ruled that Nashville Mayor Freddie O'Connell's transit plan could go forward. Voters approved the $3.1 billion plan nearly two-to-one in November. The Tennessean reports that the plan outlines major changes to the city’s bus systems, sidewalks and traffic signals over several years, funded by a sales tax increase from 9.25% to 9.75% and other sources like grants. Former Metro Council member Emily Evans and the opposition group she formed, Committee to Stop an UnFair Tax, had filed the lawsuit to block the plan and its accompanying half-cent-per-dollar sales tax before the tax increase goes into effect Feb. 1.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jan 14, 2025
News Type: Legal News

The Tennessee Commission on Children & Youth recently released its 2024 annual report, which finds the average cost of infant child care centers in Tennessee — at just over $13,000 per year — is now higher than in-state tuition at almost all of the state's public universities. That figure has steadily increased over the past five years, as has Tennessee's child poverty rate, despite a slight decline in child poverty nationwide. The study also found that more than half of Tennessee’s children are covered by TennCare; that since 2017, all measures of suicidal ideation have increased among Tennessee high school students; and that from April 2023 to March 2024, Tennessee had 5,026 children enter foster care, a rate of 3.20 per 1,000. Access the full report and data highlights here.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Jan 14, 2025
News Type: Legal News

A three-judge panel from the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday ruled that Tennessee's new age verification law — which requires websites with content deemed "harmful to minors" to verify the age of each user — can take effect while a legal challenge to it continues. The decision overturns Chief U.S. District Court Judge Sheryl Lipman's decision in early January to block the law, citing free speech protections. Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti released a statement in response, saying, “We’re glad that the unanimously-passed Protect Tennessee Minors Act remains in effect while this case proceeds ... [T]his law seeks to stem the flow of toxic content to kids and keep adult websites adults-only.” The Associated Press has the story.


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