TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Kate Prince on Mar 15, 2022

U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Bernice Bouie Donald is the featured guest on a new podcast episode from Littler Mendelson. Littler’s Inclusion, Equity & Diversity podcast series is hosted by Littler Principal Cindy-Ann Thomas, who talks with Donald about President Joe Biden’s nomination of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the U.S. Supreme Court. Donald reflects on lessons from her own personal journey as a pioneer in U.S. judicial history, why diversity of SCOTUS is so important, why Black women have not equally benefitted from women’s movements and much more. Read more and stream the podcast on Littler’s website.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Mar 15, 2022
News Type: Legal News

Former Nissan U.S. executive and Williamson County resident Greg Kelly yesterday returned to Tennessee after a nearly four-year legal battle, the Nashville Post reports. A Japanese court found Kelly guilty of underreporting pay for his former boss, Carlos Ghosn. He was acquitted of several other charges. He was allowed to return home to Tennessee following his suspended sentence. Kelly maintains his innocence and plans to appeal the conviction in a Japanese court, arguing that he was targeted by some Nissan executives out of fear of a potential merger with a French company. “This was a case where a trial showed there was no crime,” Kelly said. He was welcomed home by U.S. Sen. Bill Hagerty who called Kelly’s situation “very regrettable.”

Posted by: Kate Prince on Mar 15, 2022

The Tennessee House yesterday approved a bill that would implement residency requirements for all Republican or Democratic U.S. House or Senate candidates, the Associated Press reports. The legislation would require candidates be state residents for at least three years and residents of the county they would represent for at least one year – the same criteria imposed on state legislative candidates. The bill would only take effect after the November midterm and would not apply to incumbents. The state Senate last month passed a slightly different version of the bill, so both chambers must now decide on which version to adopt. It’s unclear if the legislation is legal under the U.S. Constitution, which says candidates be a citizen for at least seven years, at least 25 years old and an “inhabitant” of the state in which they want to be elected.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Mar 15, 2022
News Type: Election 2022

Judge Suzanne M. Lockert-Mash has announced she’s running for reelection to the 23rd Judicial District Circuit Court, Division III, the Cheatham County Exchange reports. Lockert-Mash was elected to the bench in 2014. She has presided over criminal, civil, probate and chancery cases throughout the district and is currently the presiding judge of the district’s Drug Court program. Prior to being elected as judge, Lockert-Mash was in private practice before becoming an assistant district attorney in 1990. “Being elected as a Circuit Judge was a great honor for me and a culmination of the hard work I have put in as an attorney in this district. I would like to continue my service to the citizens of this district,” she said.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Mar 15, 2022
News Type: Election 2022

Assistant District Attorney Caleb Bayless has announced he is running for judge in the 22nd Judicial District Circuit Court, Part IV. Bayless, who will run on the Republican ticket, seeks to fill the seat now held by retiring Judge Stella Hargrove. For more than a decade, Bayless has served in the 22nd Judicial District, which covers Giles, Lawrence, Maury and Wayne counties. Bayless “has a reputation of being tough on crime and committed to justice,” according to a release from his campaign. “I will always follow the rule of law and hold dangerous criminals accountable,” Bayless said in the release.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Mar 15, 2022
News Type: TBA CLE

Mark your calendars for the TBA CLE’s Local Government Forum 2022. The live virtual program will take place from 9 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. CDT on May 24 and will be worth one dual and three general credit hours of CLE. More information on the program will be released soon. If you are not a TBA Member, you can join now to receive CLE discount prices and three prepaid credits.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Mar 15, 2022

Keep up with the latest bar association events and top legal news with the TBA’s BarBuzz podcast. Attorney Sean Martin of Nashville’s Martin, Heller, Potempa & Sheppard law firm co-hosts this month’s episode, now streaming on the TBA’s website or anywhere you listen to podcasts. BarBuzz, one of five shows in the TBA Podcast Network, premiers a new episode each month.

Posted by: Jarod Word on Mar 15, 2022

As part of a new initiative, the TBA Criminal Justice Section has begun surveying candidates in contested district attorney general races across the state to raise awareness of their positions and priorities for the office. In this first edition, we hear from candidates in the hotly contested Davidson County District Attorney General race: Davidson County District Attorney General Glenn Funk (incumbent), Sara Beth Myers and P. Danielle Nellis. We asked them seven questions; the participants' respective responses can be viewed using this link.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Mar 14, 2022

When students in Knox County Schools return from spring break, they will no longer be required to wear a mask in schools, Knoxnews reports. Judge J. Ronnie Greer lifted his own order today, six days after the Knox County Board of Education and four families in the mask lawsuit all requested that the mask rule be temporarily suspended. Greer said the suspension of the mask rule can last for up to 60 days, which is the maximum time given for mediation, and the requirement can be put back in place if COVID circumstances change in the county. Greer’s order also does not affect a second suit against the Knox County Board of Education, which seeks to end the mask rule and establish a precedent that mask mandates are not a reasonable accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Mar 14, 2022

The Tennessee Supreme Court today issued an order giving the Board of Law Examiners limited discretion to (1) waive the registration late fee for lawyers working remotely for a Tennessee company and (2) approve the registration of a lawyer working as in-house counsel without having to determine when the lawyer established a presence in Tennessee. The court took the action after finding that the widespread use of remote work has created uncertainty concerning when a lawyer has established a “systematic and continuous presence” in Tennessee for purposes of Rule 7, Section 10.01(a) and Rule 8, Section RPC 5.5(d)(1) of the Rules of Professional Conduct. The order takes effect immediately and will remain in force until further order by the court.


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