TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Paul Burch on Jan 2, 2024
News Type: Legal News

Several members of the University of Tennessee's College of Law faculty made publishing news in 2023. Eric Amarante published "The Absurdity of Criminalizing Encouraging Words" in the Cato Supreme Court Review in September. Professor Wendy Bach spent much of last year giving talks to audiences across the country on her book, "Prosecuting Poverty, Criminalizing Care." And Ben Barton’s "Deborah Rhode In Memoriam: Three Stories and Ten Life Lessons" celebrates the life and legacy of the Stanford law professor and legal ethicist. Read more faculty publishing highlights.

Posted by: Paul Burch on Jan 2, 2024
News Type: Legal News

The University of Tennessee College of Law's newly launched Transactional Law Clinic located in Jefferson City provides free legal representation to the East Tennessee community while equipping law students with practical experience in business and nonprofit law. It is one of seven clinics offered through the school's nationally ranked legal clinic, and the only one focused on business law. For upper-level law students, the six-credit-hour Transactional Law Clinic provides hands-on experience representing small business and nonprofit clients in business matters. Read more about the story behind the clinic.

Posted by: Paul Burch on Jan 2, 2024
News Type: Legal News

Paul Young was sworn in as the new mayor of Memphis on Monday at the Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, reports the Commercial Appeal. Young earned nearly 28% of the vote in the mayoral election last Oct., defeating 16 other candidates. “We are Memphis,” said Young in his acceptance speech. “Together, we can make history, we can make America’s largest majority minority city ... America’s safest city.” The elected city council members were also sworn in Monday, with Chair JB Smiley Jr. noting for the first time that the council has a female majority. Young previously served as the city's director of housing and community development, and president and CEO of the Downtown Memphis Commission.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Dec 29, 2023
News Type: Legal News

A former town manager and a resident are the latest people to file complaints against Smyrna Town Manager Brian Hercules. The former manager alleges that Hercules has an "angry and domineering leadership style" and the resident's complaint states that Hercules was "unprofessional and condescending" in a phone call. Attorneys representing Town Court Judge Brittany Stevens in October sent a letter to the Town Council requesting an independent investigation of Hercules. The letter accuses Hercules of intimidation and retaliation against the judge for standing up to him about how she manages her court staff. In addition to the judge's complaints, elected Smyrna Town Court Clerk Lisa Brewer in November emailed a complaint to Mayor Mary Esther Reed accusing Hercules and Assistant Town Manager Todd Spearman of "bullying and belittling behaviors." Hercules has requested an independent review of the allegations. The Murfreesboro Daily News Journal has the full story.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Dec 29, 2023
News Type: Legal News

The University of Tennessee (UT) College of Law hosted the National Moot Court Region VII Competition in November. Tennessee Supreme Court Justice Dwight Tarwater, Tennessee Court of Appeals Judge Kristi Davis and Judge Cindy Wyrick of the U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Tennessee presided over the final round of the competition, which was held at the Tennessee Supreme Court. UT Law’s National Moot Court team, comprised of Emma Fowler, Luke Norton and Tyler Raper, qualified for the single elimination rounds of the Region VII competition. After winning in the quarter-final round, the team lost in the semi-final round. On Friday evening following the first day of competition, the college hosted a banquet celebrating 70 years of National Moot Court excellence at UT Law. See photos from the event.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Dec 29, 2023
News Type: Legal News

The University of Tennessee (UT) College of Law's Legal Clinic welcomed Tyler Dougherty as its first teaching fellow this fall. Fellowship programs not only prepare practicing attorneys to teach law, they also increase the clinic’s capacity to enroll student attorneys, take on more cases and provide legal services to the community. In August, Dougherty began teaching in the Advocacy Clinic, supervising students in juvenile, criminal and rights restoration cases. Through the UT Legal Clinic, law students gain real-world legal experience by working directly in the community representing clients in criminal, juvenile and civil cases; petitioning for orders of protection; creating businesses and nonprofit organizations; expunging charges and mediating disputes. Read more about the fellowship program.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Dec 29, 2023
News Type: Legal News

The Lincoln Memorial University (LMU) Board of Trustees dedicated a bronze statue honoring Gen. Oliver Otis Howard in Alumni Park on the LMU Main Campus in Harrogate, Tennessee, during its annual Homecoming celebration in October. LMU Chairman Autry O.V. “Pete” DeBusk and the board commissioned the Fine Art Studio of Rotblatt Amrany to create a tribute to Howard based on another statue honoring the Civil War general, which stands in Gettysburg National Military Park. In 1896, after retiring from the Army, Howard traveled to the Cumberland Gap area and met with Rev. A.A. Myers who had founded the Harrow Academy for underprivileged mountain families. Howard agreed to help raise money for the school if Myers would expand its scope to include higher education. A year later, LMU was founded as a living memorial to President Abraham Lincoln. Howard remained dedicated and involved with LMU through the end of his life in 1909. Read the press release from LMU.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Dec 29, 2023
News Type: Legal News

Several new laws will take effect on Jan. 1, 2024, including harsher penalties for distracted drivers, the elimination of disabled license plate fees for parents or guardians of a person confined to a wheelchair, and the requirement of car ignition breathalyzers to include GPS technology that will track the car's location at the time of an alcohol test. Additionally, the Tennessee Department of Safety will create a voucher program to reimburse people for the cost of a handgun safety course and the Tennessee Paid Family Leave Insurance Act will amend current code to allow insurances companies to offer paid family leave, which employers could then purchase for their employees. Read the Tennessean's full summary of the new laws.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Dec 29, 2023
News Type: Legal News

Retired Circuit Court Judge Michael W. Binkley, of Tennessee’s 21st Judicial District, is the initial recipient of the Vanessa Pettigrew Bryan Equal Justice Award, reports the Williamson Herald. The award is given in recognition of the recipient’s commitment to the relentless pursuit of justice by the 21st District public defenders and honors retired Public Defender Vanessa Pettigrew Bryan. Bryan's career spanned more than 30 years in the judicial system, starting as a magistrate and serving as public defender of the four-county district that includes Hickman, Lewis, Perry and Williamson counties.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Dec 29, 2023
News Type: Legal News

Shelby County Commissioner Mick Wright on Thursday sent a 20-page “letter of formal complaint” against Shelby County Clerk Wanda Halbert to Hamilton County District Attorney General Coty Wamp, the special prosecutor investigating Halbert’s handling of her duties. Wright says his case “reveals a clear pattern of intentional negligence.” The Daily Memphian reports that the complaint breaks down his reasoning for ousting Halbert into three sections: the abrupt closing of the clerk’s office in Germantown in 2020 and the Poplar Plaza shopping center earlier this year, as well as the expiration of leases in other locations; the backlog of car tags and vehicle registration renewals in 2022 that Wright describes as an “operational collapse;” and Halbert’s persistent complaints since taking office in 2018 that her office isn’t getting the funding it is entitled to from the county administration and can’t hire enough employees or get the proper equipment.


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