TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Dec 16, 2020
News Type: TBA CLE

Need ethics hours before the end of the year? Join Laura Chastain from the Board of Professional Responsibility for a review of ethics updates in 2020. This on-demand video provides 1.25 dual credit hours and is part of the TBA’s Year End CLE Blast, providing attorneys with last-minute CLE all month long. TBA members save money on all CLE programs. Questions about how to get the hours you need? Contact the TBA staff for help. And thanks to Blast presenting sponsor Clio and event partner Geico for supporting this month-long event.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Dec 16, 2020
News Type: Correction

An article in Tuesday’s TBA Today misidentified the defendant in an upcoming trial of a Metro Nashville police officer charged with murder. Andrew Delke is the officer charged in the shooting death of Daniel Hambrick.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Dec 15, 2020
News Type: Legal News

The National Football Foundation (NFF) & College Hall of Fame are honoring Memphis law professor Lynda Black as part of the 2020 NFF Faculty Salutes. Black is an associate professor of law at the University of Memphis Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law and serves as the faculty athletics representative to the NCAA for the University of Memphis. Faculty athletics representatives from each school with an NFF National Scholar-Athlete will receive a $5,000 donation to help fund the academic support services for student-athletes. To be an NFF National Scholar-Athlete, candidates must have at least a 3.2 GPA, outstanding football ability as a first team player and demonstrated leadership characteristics. Black’s scholar-athlete is Memphis Tigers quarterback Brady White. Read more about the Faculty Salutes from the NFF’s website.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Dec 15, 2020
News Type: Legal News

The trial of Andrew Delke, a white Metro Nashville Police officer charged with murder after fatally shooting a Black man, has been rescheduled for next summer, the Tennessean reports. Jury selection is now scheduled to begin July 5, with the trial expected to begin July 12. Delke shot Daniel Hambrick three times in the back during a 2018 foot chase in North Nashville, claiming he did so in self-defense. Delke's attorney David Raybin maintains the officer was following his police training. Raybin asked the court for a change of venue last year, but the motion was denied by Judge Monte Watkins and in January the state’s Court of Criminal Appeals declined to intervene. Raybin has filed a renewed motion on the matter, which will be heard on Jan. 25.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Dec 15, 2020
News Type: Legal News

U.S. District Judge Bernard Friedman again ruled against the state of Tennessee yesterday over a controversial state law that requires a waiting period before an abortion, the Associated Press reports. Friedman overturned the law in October, declaring it unconstitutional. Attorney General Herbert Slatery filed a motion last month asking Friedman to leave the law in place while the state appeals to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, arguing that it was not a burden for a “large fraction” of those it affects. In his opinion denying the motion yesterday, Friedman referred back to his October ruling, which found that the statute “burdens the majority of abortion patients with significant, and often insurmountable, logistical and financial hurdles.”

Posted by: Kate Prince on Dec 15, 2020
News Type: Legal News

U.S. Deputy Attorney General Jeffrey A. Rosen is set to lead the Department of Justice on Dec. 23 when U.S. Attorney General William Barr leaves the office, the ABA Journal reports. During his time in the No. 2 position at the DOJ, and despite his lack of experience as a prosecutor, Rosen took leading roles in the antitrust lawsuit against Google and the department’s opioid case against Purdue Pharma. He was also involved in a lawsuit seeking to delay the publication of a book by former national security advisor John Bolton. Rosen’s colleagues told the Wall Street Journal that Rosen relies on aides for guidance in areas where he lacks experience. Rosen’s job will be taken over by his top deputy, Richard Donoghue, a former U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York who won convictions against Sinaloa Cartel leader Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman Loera and NXIVM cult leader Keith Raniere. Barr announced his resignation yesterday amid reports of tensions with President Donald Trump.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Dec 15, 2020
News Type: Upcoming

The Tennessee Department of Revenue will hold its next free tax webinar on Dec. 29, the latest in a series of programs being offered to the public. This month’s installment will focus on franchise and excise exemptions for insurance companies and third party securitization as well as consolidated net worth applications. Register here for the December program and see the list of other upcoming webinars.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Dec 15, 2020

The criminal division of the Hamilton County General Sessions Court will close on Dec. 18 and will hear only in-custody cases due to court personnel testing positive for the COVID-19 virus, the Times Free Press reports. The court will reopen on Jan. 4, 2021, but many cases will be reset for March or later. Cases involving multiple defendants will also be rescheduled unless the defense objects. For defendants who are incarcerated, preliminary hearings will be held on Dec. 21 and 28 beginning at 8:30 a.m. As of Monday afternoon, Criminal Court Clerk Vince Dean told the paper his office would remain open.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Dec 15, 2020
News Type: Legal News

The University of Tennessee College of Law has been ranked 14th on preLaw Magazine’s list of best value law schools. According to the College of Law’s website, the magazine identified 20 law schools from across the nation that offer students the best education for the money. Employment, bar passage, tuition, living expenses, average debt of borrowers and the percentage of students who receive loans were all factors the magazine considered when ranking the schools. “We are pleased that we’ve been able to keep tuition affordable for our students,” Interim Dean Doug Blaze said. “We want them to be able to focus on becoming successful lawyers and leaders in their communities.” 

Posted by: Kate Prince on Dec 15, 2020
News Type: TBA CLE

Examine and identify the characteristics needed to be a leader during the TBA’s 2020 Leadership Academy on Dec. 29. This live virtual event offers interactive curriculum designed to help develop leadership skills, build characteristics of effective leadership and identify strategies to overcome challenges. Knoxville attorneys Buck Lewis and William Lockett Jr. will lead the program, which runs from 9:30 a.m. until 3 p.m. CST and provides five hours of dual credit CLE. Leadership Academy is part of the TBA’s Year End CLE Blast, providing attorneys with last-minute CLE all month long.  


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