TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Brooke Leeton on Mar 17, 2026

Entries for the TBA Administrative Law Section's Annual Writing Competition for law students currently enrolled in a Tennessee law school are due April 30. The section hosts the competition to promote an interest in and understanding of administrative law in the state, and to strengthen the relationship among administrative law professors, students and practitioners in Tennessee. The winning submission will be published in the Administrative Law Section newsletter and the winner will be awarded $1,000. View the competition rules for more information.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Mar 17, 2026
News Type: Legal News

Lawyers representing Tennessee foster children have filed a motion in the U.S. District Court, Middle District of Tennessee, for an emergency preliminary injunction in a lawsuit against the Tennessee Department of Children’s Services (DCS), the Nashville Post reports. The legal team is urging the court to end alleged “inhumane conditions” in transitional housing. A Better Childhood, a New York-based nonprofit watchdog organization, filed the lawsuit last year. The nonprofit is being assisted by lawyers at Bass Berry & Sims, Willkie Farr & Gallagher and the Barbara McDowell Social Justice Center. The new motion outlines “inhumane and unconstitutional conditions,” including physical abuse, overcrowding, lack of showers and medical care based on a December 2025 state audit of DCS. The motion seeks to correct these conditions for youths living in transitional housing and seeks ongoing monitoring of the facilities.

Posted by: Jarod Word on Mar 17, 2026
News Type: TBA CLE

The TBA Animal Law Forum 2026 will take place Oct. 9 at the Nashville Zoo. This annual favorite provides updates on trends and advancements in animal law and related practice areas. Participants can meet with other animal lovers and enjoy the fun the zoo offers. Zoo admission, breakfast, lunch and an animal meet and greet are included with the program. Topics and more information coming soon. Do not miss this event, you never know who is going to show up! Register now.

Posted by: Brooke Leeton on Mar 17, 2026

Entries for the TBA Administrative Law Section's Annual Writing Competition for law students currently enrolled in a Tennessee law school are due April 30. The section hosts the competition to promote an interest in and understanding of administrative law in the state, and to strengthen the relationship among administrative law professors, students and practitioners in Tennessee. The winning submission will be published in the Administrative Law Section newsletter and the winner will be awarded $1,000. View the competition rules for more information.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Mar 16, 2026

A bill that sought to charge women who seek abortions with homicide, and potentially the death penalty, died in a Tennessee House subcommittee on March 10, The Tennessean reports. HB570, sponsored by Rep. Jody Barrett, R-Dickson, would have removed legal protections currently in state law for pregnant women and classified harm done to an unborn child as equal to assaults on a person “born alive.” No member of the House Population Subcommittee made a motion to hear the bill, which effectively killed the legislation. Barrett said the bill was intended to align with the state’s Human Life Protection Act, a trigger law that took effect after Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022. The Nashville Banner has more on Barrett's comments.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Mar 16, 2026

Marion Scudder Griffin, the first woman licensed to practice law in Tennessee, is now honored with a historical marker in Memphis recognizing her legal career. According to Local Memphis, Griffin made history in 1907 after the Tennessee legislature passed a law clarifying that women could obtain law licenses. She previously had passed an oral law examination but was denied a license by the Tennessee Supreme Court because state law did not explicitly permit women to practice. Griffin later enrolled at the University of Michigan Law School, completed her studies and reapplied as supporters lobbied lawmakers to change the law. She went on to practice law for more than 40 years and later became the first woman to serve in the Tennessee General Assembly before retiring in 1949. Historians say her achievements helped pave the way for future generations of women in the legal profession.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Mar 16, 2026
News Type: Legal News

Estefany Rodríguez, a Nashville journalist detained earlier this month by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, was scheduled to appear in a Louisiana immigration court for a bond hearing today. Separately, a federal judge in Nashville has set a hearing for Tuesday to consider constitutional challenges to her detention from her attorneys, the Tennessee Lookout reports. Rodríguez, a reporter for the Spanish-language outlet Nashville Noticias, was arrested by ICE agents March 4. Government attorneys say she is subject to deportation after allegedly overstaying her visa.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Mar 16, 2026
News Type: Legal News

ChatGPT maker OpenAI has been accused in a new lawsuit of practicing law without a U.S. license and helping a former disability claimant breach a settlement and flood a federal court docket with meritless filings. Reuters reports that Nippon Life Insurance Company of America alleges that OpenAI wrongfully provided legal assistance to a woman who sought to reopen a lawsuit that had already been settled and dismissed. Nippon claims OpenAI encouraged the woman, an employee of a logistics company insured by Nippon, to continue pursuing the already-settled disability case and that it spent significant time and resources responding to filings generated with the help of ChatGPT. The lawsuit is believed to be among the first to accuse a major AI developer of engaging in the unauthorized practice of law through a consumer-facing chatbot.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Mar 16, 2026
News Type: U.S. Supreme Court

The U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled Feb. 25 that trial judges may prohibit a defendant and their attorney from discussing the defendant’s ongoing testimony during an overnight recess, while still allowing discussions on other matters such as trial strategy or plea negotiations, Bloomberg Law reports. The case arose from the Texas murder trial of David Villarreal, whose testimony as the defense’s only witness was paused for a 24-hour recess during which the judge instructed attorneys not to “manage his testimony,” though other discussions were permitted. Writing for the court, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson said the restriction strikes a balance between a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to the assistance and advice of counsel and and a defendant’s responsibility when they become a witness to offer sworn testimony that is free of any improper influence. The court affirmed the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals’ decision upholding the order, concluding that judges may impose limited restrictions on discussions about testimony itself while a defendant remains on the stand.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Mar 16, 2026
News Type: Legal News

The Mid-South Commercial Law Institute recently named new officers and directors to its 25-member board. Officers are: President Wendy Geurin Smith with Evans Petree; Vice President/President-Elect Justin Campbell with Thompson Burton; Secretary Maggie Reidyn, a staff attorney with the Chapter 13 Trustee; Treasurer R. Bradley Banks with Richard Banks & Associates; and Immediate Past President Cara Alday with Patrick, Beard, Schulman & Jacoway. New directors elected to five year terms are: Michael G. Abelow with Sherrard Roe Voigt & Harbison; Shanna Fuller Veach, a law clerk to Bankruptcy Chief Judge Suzanne H. Bauknight; Erin Wallin, a law clerk to Judge Nicholas W. Whittenburg; Elisabeth Donnovin with Johnson & Mulroony; and R. Campbell Hillyer with Butler Snow. Joining the board to fulfill the remaining term of a departing director is Locke Houston Waldrop with Baker Donelson. See the list of the full 2026 board.


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