TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Suzanne Craig Robertson on Jan 27, 2022

A Grammy-award-winning music producer sued the city of Nashville in 2017 after he was ordered to stop seeing clients in his home, a case that this week was heard by the Tennessee Supreme Court, according to NewsChannel 5. The city had said Lij Shaw was violating a zoning ordinance by serving clients from his home business. Before the original case was resolved, however, in 2020 because of the pandemic, Metro Council approved a bill that would temporarily allow up to six clients at home businesses like Shaw’s. That law will expire in 2023, so Shaw continued with the suit.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Jan 27, 2022
News Type: Legal News

Plans for a 14-acre juvenile justice campus in Nashville are underway, WKRN reports. Juvenile Court Judge Sheila Calloway says the new facilities, named the “Nashville Youth Campus for Empowerment,” will build on the restorative justice practices they’ve been using over the years. The campus will house the county’s Juvenile Court, a pre-trial housing facility and resources and agencies that can get services to families in need. It will include a 24-hour assessment center officials hope will support youth in crisis, a safe exchange facility for custodial visitation, and meeting areas for community partners. Calloway says she hopes to spend less money on the “detention side” of things and more on the “prevention side, to make sure that we’re providing great services to have our service providers right there on the campus with us.” The project is estimated to take about three and a half years to complete, costing  $130 million, but Calloway and others are working with architects to eliminate some aspects and lower that amount. 

Posted by: Kate Prince on Jan 27, 2022
News Type: Legal News

Law firm Lewis Thomason has established a new diversity scholarship at the University of Memphis Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law. The Lewis Thomason Diversity Scholarship will be awarded to a student who meets at least one of the following criteria: a first-generation college graduate, a graduate of a historically minority undergraduate institution, a socio-economically disadvantaged student, or a member of a historically under-represented group. Lisa Ramsay Cole, managing shareholder of the firm, says the scholarship will also “support a mentorship program, providing recipients a mutually beneficial relationship and develop well-prepared young attorneys.” This is the second such scholarship Lewis Thomason has offered in recent years. Read the full press release.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Jan 27, 2022
News Type: Legal News

Jury selection began Tuesday for the trial of Travis Reinking, who is accused of fatally shooting four people inside a Nashville Waffle House in 2018, the Associated Press reports. Reinking opened fire inside the restaurant with an AR-15 before being tackled to the ground by restaurant patron James Shaw Jr. Reinking then fled on foot, prompting a two-day manhunt. District Attorney Glenn Funk’s office said prosecutors would seek a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole against Reinking, who has pleaded not guilty. Reinking was ordered to receive treatment for schizophrenia after his arrest, but mental health experts concluded in October 2018 that he was fit to stand trial. The trial is expected to begin early next week. Records in the case have been sealed and attorneys are under a judge’s order to not speak publicly on the case. It is unknown how Reinking plans to defend himself.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Jan 27, 2022
News Type: Legal News

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer formally announced his retirement during an event with President Joe Biden at the White House today. Quoting from the Gettysburg Address and, at one point, holding up his own personal pocket-sized copy of the U.S. Constitution, Breyer expressed hope for the future of the “experiment” of U.S. democracy. NPR has the full video and transcript of Breyer’s speech. “I’ve made no decision except the one person I will nominate will be someone with extraordinary qualifications, character, experience and integrity,” Biden said during the event according to the Associated Press. “And that person will be the first Black woman ever nominated to the United States Supreme Court. It’s long overdue.”

Posted by: Kate Prince on Jan 27, 2022
News Type: Election 2022

Judge Michael Collins this week announced he will run in the Republican primary to keep his seat on the 15th Judicial District Circuit Court, covering Wilson, Smith, Macon, Jackson and Trousdale counties, the Lebanon Democrat reports. Collins was elected to serve as the district’s General Sessions judge in 2014 before being elected to the Circuit Court in 2020, filling the vacancy created by Judge John Wootten’s retirement. Collins was appointed by former Gov. Bill Haslam to serve on the Recovery Court Advisory Committee to the Tennessee Department of Mental Health and awarded the Community Impact Award from the Drug Prevention Coalition. He also founded the district’s first Misdemeanor Recovery Court and has been recognized for his work in addiction recovery.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Jan 27, 2022
News Type: Legal News

Tennessee Attorney General Herbert H. Slatery III today provided an update on the $26 billion opioid agreement with drugmaker Johnson & Johnson and pharmaceutical distributors Cardinal, McKesson, and AmerisourceBergen, for the companies’ roles in the opioid crisis. Last year’s settlement hinged on a “critical mass” of participation from states, who had 30 days to join the deal, and local governments, who had five months. In Tennessee, more than 150 local governments have joined the settlements, including every county and all cities with populations of 25,000 or more. “Today we have every reason to be encouraged: we have impressive participation, nationally and locally, to get this settlement across the finish line,” Slatery said. Read more from the AG’s website.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Jan 27, 2022
News Type: Legal News

The Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency (TWRA) has temporarily postponed plans to raze 2,000 acres of hardwoods on state-owned land in White County, Fox17 Nashville reports. TWRA had previously announced it would clear the land, gifted to the state by Bridgestone Americas, to create grassland habitat for the Northern bobwhite quail and keep all profits from the sale of the land’s timber. Earlier this month a private citizen filed a 60-day intent to sue letter if the deforestation plan was not stopped, and a bipartisan group of 34 state legislators condemned the plan in a letter, criticizing the TWRA’s “shameful lack of communication and transparency.” A bipartisan bill was also introduced this week that would require TWRA officials to transfer all proceeds from the sale of the state’s natural resources into Tennessee’s general fund. Following those developments, the TWRA yesterday said it "will be suspending any plans to do any cutting until this situation is resolved."

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Jan 26, 2022
News Type: Legal News

Hamilton County is set to possibly receive millions of dollars in a settlement with a manufacturer and three distributors of opioids, attorney Ronnie Berke told the county commission today. Berke says that defendants have until mid-March to reject details, but that the county should expect to receive $10.8 million from two different funds, paid out over 18 years, Chattanoogan.com reports. Berke said he has estimated that the county will receive $900,000 over the first three years, and then between $500,000 and $600,000 for the next 15 years. Of the total, $7 million must be set aside to treat problems caused by the opioid crisis.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Jan 26, 2022
News Type: Wellness Wednesday

The Institute for Well-Being in Law, a nonprofit formed to further the work of the American Bar Association’s National Task Force on Lawyer Well-Being, hosted its inaugural conference last week. The virtual event “Redesigning the Legal Profession for a Better Future,” focused on well-being for individuals, workplaces, law schools and law firms. The institute was created in December 2020 to “lead a culture shift in law to establish well-being as a core centerpiece of professional success.” The institute also produces the podcast “Path to Well-Being in Law,” which focuses on the work of wellness advocates across the country and offers a number of resources for those who want to learn more about advancing attorney well-being.


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