TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Kate Prince on Feb 24, 2022
News Type: Legal News

Longtime Nashville attorneys Byron Trauger and Bob Tuke today announced they will dissolve their law firm, Trauger & Tuke, the Nashville Post reports. Tuke, a past chair of the Tennessee Democratic Party who ran for Senate in 2008, is set to retire. According to a release, Trauger will now join Nashville’s Wiseman Ashworth Law Group, which will rebrand as Wiseman Ashworth Trauger, effective March 1. Trauger's practice is focused on health care, complex civil litigation and regulatory agency work, and he has served on the boards of both public and privately held health care and technology companies. “Tom and I are thrilled and honored that Byron is joining the firm as a named partner,” said Ashworth, a former TBA president. “He has a depth of experience and an excellent reputation in the Bar, with his clients, and in the community as a highly respected counsellor, advocate and public servant.”

Posted by: Kate Prince on Feb 24, 2022
News Type: Election 2022

Nashville public defender, Jeff Preptit, has dropped his campaign for the Democratic nomination in House District 59, the Nashville Post reports. Preptit was forced to make the decision after the newly redrawn House maps put him in a different district, which now includes wealthier areas in southern Davidson County. Local health care executive Caleb Hemmer is seeking the Democratic nomination, while Michelle Foreman and Wyatt Rampy are running as Republicans. Incumbent Rep. Jason Potts, D-Nashville, is not seeking reelection.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Feb 24, 2022

Hamilton County District Attorney Neal Pinkston has placed his wife and brother-in-law on administrative leave after an investigative report from the state comptroller found Pinkston in violation of the state's nepotism policy, the Chattanoogan reports. According to the report, Pinkston’s wife, who serves as chief of staff, and his brother-in-law, an investigator, are both under Pinkston’s line of supervision. While the office is in violation of the state’s Nepotism Policy Act, the report states it “did not find any evidence of favoritism regarding salary increases” for either position. Pinkston announced he placed his family members on administrative leave and said he is “reviewing the recommendations of the comptroller’s office.”

Posted by: Kate Prince on Feb 24, 2022

Three state residents have filed a lawsuit over the new House and Senate redistricting maps, the Tennessean reports. The complaint, backed by the Tennessee Democratic Party, alleges the General Assembly unconstitutionally divided more counties than necessary in the House map and numbered Senate districts nonconsecutively. The suit does not challenge the state’s new congressional map. "Tennesseans should pick their own representatives and not the other way around," Tennessee Democratic Party Chair Hendrell Remus said in a statement. According to WPLN, the state Democratic Party has agreed to pay all fees associated with litigation in the case. Republicans have maintained the maps are constitutional and meet all legal requirements. The Tennessee Attorney General’s Office said it is “ready to defend an open and fair process.”

Posted by: Liz Slagle Todaro on Feb 24, 2022
News Type: Legal News

The YWCA of Nashville & Middle Tennessee hosted its 30th Anniversary of the Academy for Women of Achievement (AWA) this week with three Nashville lawyers among those honored: Dr. Glenda Glover, president, Tennessee State University; Diane Lance, department head, Metro Nashville Office of Family Safety; and DarKenya Waller, executive director, Legal Aid Society of Middle Tennessee & the Cumberlands. AWA was launched locally in 1992 to honor women "who, through excellence and leadership in their chosen fields, serve as role models for other women.” The event also celebrated Wanda Lyle, UBS Nashville Business Solution Center (retired), Metro Nashville/Davidson County Councilmember Zulfat Suara and corporate honoree MP&F Strategic Communications. This year’s honorees join a prestigious group of 179 women and 31 organizations previously inducted into the AWA.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Feb 24, 2022
News Type: BPR Actions

The Tennessee Supreme Court suspended 26 attorneys last week for failure to pay the annual registration fee. Thirteen of them also failed to file proof that client funds are held in an IOLTA-compliant account. View the Feb. 16 fee suspension order and IOLTA suspension order. See the list of all lawyers suspended for fee and IOLTA violations in 2022 or access all administrative suspensions dating back to 2005.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Feb 24, 2022
News Type: Election 2022

Former House Speaker Beth Harwell has announced she will run for the Republican nomination in Tennessee’s redrawn 5th Congressional District, Nashville Scene reports. Harwell, a Nashville native, was elected in 1988 to represent parts of southwest Davidson County in the state House and was elected speaker in 2011. She left the House in 2018 and made an unsuccessful bid for governor. Harwell currently servces on the board of the Tennessee Valley Authority and is a former chair of the Tennessee Republican Party. She joins a crowded Republican primary, which includes educational consultant Natisha Brooks, businessman Baxter Lee, former U.S. State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus, music video producer Robby Starbuck, and attorney and retired brigadier general Kurt Winstead.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Feb 24, 2022

TBA Director of Public Policy & Government Affairs Berkley Schwarz and Adams and Reese attorney and TBA lobbyist tackle this week’s news from the General Assembly on the latest episode of the TBA’s Legislative Updates. New this week: a hopeful meeting with Lt. Gov. Randy McNally regarding elimination of the Professional Privilege Tax. Legislative Updates airs every Thursday on the TBA’s Facebook page. It is also released as a podcast on the same day and can be found on the TBA’s website or wherever you listen to podcasts.  

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Feb 24, 2022
News Type: BPR Actions

The Tennessee Supreme Court yesterday dismissed a reinstatement petition from Texas lawyer Daniel S. Edmunds Jr. Edmunds filed the petition on Oct. 4, 2021. The Tennessee Commission on Continuing Legal Education opposed the petition based on Edmunds’s failure to pay certain fees and penalties and comply with CLE requirements in 2019, 2020 and 2021. The Board of Professional Responsibility also opposed to the petition based on his failure to pay the required reinstatement fee. Due to these outstanding issues, the court dismissed the petition.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Feb 24, 2022
News Type: BPR Actions

The Tennessee Supreme Court recently rejected a conditional guilty plea and disciplinary action proposed by the Board of Professional Responsibility against Williamson County lawyer Melissa Ann Baker. A petition for discipline was filed against Baker on May 22, 2020. She agreed to a conditional guilty plea on Nov. 18, 2021. After reviewing the entire record in the matter, the court said it had concerns “that the recommended punishment, particularly the period of active suspension, is too lenient.” The court therefore rejected the plea and referred the matter back to the board for further proceedings.


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