TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Julia Wilburn on May 6, 2026
News Type: Legal News

Lincoln Memorial University Duncan School of Law (LMU Law) will welcome Chancellor Christopher D. Heagerty as its commencement speaker during the law school’s graduation ceremony, tomorrow at 4 p.m. EDT. This 14th graduating class is the largest in the law school’s history at 105 graduates. Heagerty was appointed to the Knox County Chancery Court, Division III in 2021 by Gov. Bill Lee. He graduated from the University of Tennessee (now Winston) College of Law in 1994. After a clerkship with Hodges, Doughty & Carson during law school, he was hired by the Carpenter & O’Connor firm, where he worked for six years as an associate and four years as a partner. He then practiced with Hodges, Doughty & Carson from 2004 to 2015, handling mostly civil litigation. He started his own firm in 2015, and a large percentage of his practice was in litigation cases. Heagerty has served as an adjunct professor at LMU Law and at Winston College of Law. Read more in a press release.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on May 6, 2026
News Type: Legal News

FisherBroyles, a law firm with an international presence, has opened an office in Nashville with the addition of corporate attorney Stacey Garrett Koju. FisherBroyles partner Ken Cutshaw will join Koju in launching the Nashville office. “Expanding our geographic footprint with attorneys as sophisticated and proven as Stacey and Ken demonstrates our firm’s commitment to providing clients with exceptional counsel and guidance where and when it’s needed, reinforcing the advantages of our distributed model and its continued growth,” said James Fisher II, cofounder and managing partner of the firm. Read more in a press release. The office is located at 222 2nd Ave. S., 17th Floor, Nashville 37201 and can be reached at 866-211-5914.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on May 6, 2026
News Type: Election 2026

Voters across Tennessee cast their ballots yesterday during the state’s May primary. In Memphis, Mickell M. Lowry clinched the Democratic nomination for Shelby County mayor against Republican nominee John J. Deberry Jr. and four court clerk seats were decided. Only one was contested. The Commercial Appeal reports on those results. In Jackson, attorney Jen Free will be unopposed for a General Sessions judgeship in August. The Jackson Sun has that coverage, as well as the results of two court clerk races. Nashville saw three judge races decided, including the upset of two of the three incumbents. Three court clerk seats and the public defender also were on the ballot. The Tennessean reports on those races. In Chattanooga, Jennifer Peck was unchallenged for the Hamilton County Circuit Court judge seat while two of three court clerk positions will be unopposed in August, according to Chattanoogan.com. Finally in Knox County, incumbent General Session Judge Andrea Kline will face Democractic challenger Ben Houston III in the August election, Knox News reports. The paper also reports that Emily Abbott will be the lone general election candidate for a criminal court seat and two court clerk candidates will advance to the general election unopposed. The Tennessee Secretary of State’s website has a complete list of election results for each of the state’s counties. Early voting in the general election will run July 17-Aug. 1 with election day on Aug. 6.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on May 6, 2026
News Type: TBA CLE

The TBA Young Lawyers Division's (YLD) Exploration CLEs received rave reviews last yearv— including, "it was the single greatest CLE I've ever been to," "insightful" and "very original idea." Now make plans to join colleagues for the fourth Exploration CLE at Long Hunter State Park in Nashville on Sept. 25. Take the day to experience the magnificence of one of Tennessee's state parks while earning three hours of CLE credit. The day will include lunch and a ranger-led hike. More information and speakers will be announced soon.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on May 6, 2026
News Type: TBA Convention 2026

If you plan to attend the 2026 TBA Convention but have not yet booked your hotel, time is running out! The TBA hotel room block at the Crowne Plaza Knoxville will close this Friday, May 8, at 5 p.m. EDT. Book now to take advantage of our special discounted rate. Can't make it to the full convention? Join colleagues on June 11 for TBA's first-ever Tech Showcase. Day passes for Thursday are now available online.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on May 6, 2026

The Tennessee Bar Association (TBA) and Tennessee’s American Inns of Court are accepting nominations for the 2026 Judge Pamela L. Reeves Tennessee Professionalism Award. The deadline for submitting nominations is May 8. The annual award is presented to a lawyer or judge whose life and practice display sterling character and unquestioned integrity, coupled with ongoing dedication to the highest standards of the rule of law and the highest standards of the legal profession in Tennessee. This year's award will be presented to a lawyer or judge residing in the Eastern Grand Division. Nominees must be alive when nominations are submitted but they need not be an active member of an American Inn of Court or the TBA. The award will be presented at the TBA's Annual Convention, which will be held in Knoxville June 10-13. See past recipients of the award.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on May 5, 2026
News Type: Legal News

Several members of the TBA leadership attended the American Bar Association's (ABA) Day on the Hill this spring. Participants met with several members of the Tennessee Congressional delegation to discuss Legal Services Corporation (LSC) funding, judicial security, utilizing lawyers as resources when drafting AI-related legislation and public service loan forgiveness. The group also attended the LSC reception at the U.S. Supreme Court. See photos from the event.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on May 5, 2026

Tennessee’s state legislature reconvened today for what likely will be a three-day special session, the Nashville Banner reports. The session — convened after the U.S. Supreme Court found that racial gerrymandering in Louisiana was unconstitutional — will focus on redrawing the state’s congressional map, including the state’s last Democrat-controlled district in Memphis. Gov. Bill Lee, who called the session, said, “We owe it to Tennesseans to ensure our congressional districts accurately reflect the will of Tennessee voters.”

Yesterday, six bills were filed. Most are placeholders that do not include full bill language. Details should emerge tomorrow during the committee process. One bill, HB7006/SB7006, introduced by House Minority Leader Rep. John Ray Clemmons, D-Nashville, does contain a specific redistricting plan. Today, the House and Senate set the stage for the session with floor action according to the Tennessean and WREG. At a press conference last night, Democrats said they plan to lay “the foundation for legal challenges” to delay or overturn any Republican changes, the Nashville Scene reports.

Tomorrow, the House will reconvene at 9 a.m. with action planned in three committees: the Congressional Redistricting Committee will meet at 11 a.m. followed immediately by the Finance, Ways & Means Committee and then the Calendar & Rules Committee. The Senate will reconvene at 8:30 a.m. Committee meetings scheduled in that chamber include the State & Local Government Committee at 9:30 a.m., Judiciary Committee at 11 a.m. and Finance, Ways & Means Committee at 2 p.m. All times central.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on May 5, 2026
News Type: Passages

Retired Colonel Karen Victoria Fair of Alcoa died April 6 at age 62. Fair graduated with honors from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point University in 1985 and immediately began her Army career. She was a decorated veteran with over 25 years of leadership, including service as general counsel for Commanding General First Armored Division in Wiesbaden, Germany, and strategist and later division chief to the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the Pentagon. She served as a deputy general counsel in Iraq during “Operation Iraqi Freedom.” She was appointed by the Pentagon as litigation manager and led a team that successfully prosecuted soldiers for the human rights violations in the highly publicized Abu Ghraib scandal. Fair graduated on the Commandant’s List as a top scholar in international and operational law from The Judge Advocate General’s Legal School at the University of Virginia Law School, and she received the James L. Powers Award for Highest Excellence in Trial Advocacy while completing her law degree at the University of Tennessee (now Winston) College of Law. Services were held April 15.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on May 5, 2026

In a statement issued on May 1, Davidson County Sheriff Daron Hall asserted that Metro Nashville is exempt from newly passed legislation HB2219/SB2223, which requires sheriffs' offices to enter into agreements with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) known as 287(g) partnerships. The Tennessean reports that Hall said the bill only pertains to sheriffs certified by the Tennessee Peace Officer Standards and Training Commission, a categorization that does not involve Metro Nashville-Davidson County. In related news, U.S. Sens. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tennessee, and Lindsay Graham, R-South Carolina, last week introduced the 287(g) Expansion Act to provide financial incentives for local governments to participate in the program, which allows ICE to partner with state and local law enforcement to identify and remove individuals in the country without legal status.


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