TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Mar 16, 2022

The battle over the bust continues, Tennessee Lookout reports. Collierville resident Lee Miller, who claims family kinship to Lt. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest, says the bust should be moved from the Tennessee State Museum to a Maury County site where the remains of Forrest and his wife are now located (they recently were moved from a Memphis park). State Sen. Janice Bowling, R-Tullahoma, is sponsoring three bills dealing with relocation of the bust from the museum. She has postponed consideration of the measures due to opposition from the museum.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Mar 16, 2022

A proposed Tennessee ballot initiative that would have asked voters if the attorney general should be confirmed by state lawmakers instead of the state Supreme Court was defeated by the House Civil Justice Subcommittee yesterday without debate and on a voice vote. The proposal cleared required hurdles in the Senate but would have needed a two-thirds vote in the House if it had advanced through the subcommittee. Tennessee Attorney General Herbert Slatery opposed the measure saying the current system best supports the attorney general’s independence. He warned that the constitutional amendment would make the position a “political office.” The Herald Courier has the AP story.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Mar 16, 2022

New special prosecutor Roger Moore from Nashville is expected to be assigned to a shooting case in Soddy Daisy, Chattanoogan.com reports. Moore would replace Tammy Meade, who was named to the case in January after local district attorney Neal Pinkston recused himself. Pinkston stepped down after accusing a political opponent, Coty Wamp, of obstruction of justice and witness tampering in the case. Meade agreed with Wamp that the wrong man had been arrested and had charges dropped against Hugo Garcia Padilla. She then identified Hugo Garcia Robles as the perpetrator and said she would seek an indictment with the local grand jury. 

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Mar 16, 2022
News Type: Wellness Wednesday

It’s easy in these difficult, uncertain times to lose hope, but allowing ourselves to sink into a funk can affect our professional and personal lives. Leadership development consultant Dane Jensen says that hope has not often been a topic in business but the COVID pandemic has changed that. Today, he says, business leaders are realizing that hope is essential for workers’ satisfaction, motivation, health and performance. When things look bleak, remaining hopeful is one of the toughest but most essential self-management tasks. He lays out three steps we can take to reclaim hope: (1) imagine a plausible positive future, (2) identify steps to achieve that future, and (3) view setbacks as inflection points to reset. When we believe that the future will be better than the present and that we have the power to make it so, we can sustain hope and enjoy its many benefits. Learn how to get started in Jensen's recent Harvard Business Review article.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Mar 16, 2022
News Type: TBA CLE

The 2022 Elder Law Forum is scheduled to take place in person on July 15 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. CDT at the downtown Nashville Public Library. This venerable favorite offers essential and practical material for elder law attorneys and those interested in the practice area. The program will feature information on conservatorships, special needs trusts, veterans benefits, ethics involving considerations in the Mary Northern case and much more. Don't miss this opportunity to learn from seasoned experts and catch up on the latest developments in the field.

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

Hamilton County Commissioner Greg Martin today announced he will run in the Republican primary for the vacant state House District 26 seat, the Chattanoogan reports. Martin served on the Hamilton County School Board from 2012 until 2016 when he was elected to the Board of Commissioners. “Over the past 10 years of public service, I’ve learned many things which will help me represent the voters of House District 26, such as balancing a budget, making hard decisions about competing priorities and working towards one goal – what is best for the people I represent,” Martin said in a statement. Former Rep. Robin Smith vacated the House District 26 seat following her indictment on federal wire fraud charges.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Mar 15, 2022

Congress has approved a $1.5 trillion spending plan that includes a 6.1% boost in funding for federal judiciary security, Reuters reports. A total of $704.8 million was allotted for court security. Included in the funding is money for the creation of a program aimed at identifying and pursuing the voluntary removal of judges' personal information from the internet. The judiciary is also seeking approval of the Daniel Anderl Judicial Security and Privacy Act, which would allow federal judges to redact personal information on government websites and bar people and businesses from publishing such information online if written requests are made not to do so. The measure is named after the son of U.S. District Judge Esther Salas, who was murdered in an attack at the New Jersey judge’s home in 2020 by a disgruntled lawyer.  

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.


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