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Posted by: Azya Thornton on Dec 29, 2025

In this compensation appeal, the employee questions the trial court’s order denying her request for permanent disability benefits but awarding future medical benefits. The employee originally reported various injuries when some chairs fell on her at work. The employer accepted the compensability of the accident and authorized medical care for her right arm complaints but declined to pay any temporary disability benefits. After an interlocutory hearing, the trial court awarded the employee some temporary disability benefits and ordered the employer to continue providing medical care related to her right upper extremity injury. Thereafter, the employee filed another request seeking additional temporary disability benefits. Following another interlocutory hearing, the trial court found the employer could accommodate the employee’s restrictions and denied her request for further temporary benefits. After the trial court issued that order, the employee informed her authorized treating physician she did not want any further medical treatment. A compensation hearing was then held, and the trial court found the employee had not submitted evidence that would entitle her to permanent disability benefits but awarded future reasonable and necessary medical benefits causally related to her work injury. The employee has appealed. Having carefully reviewed the record, we affirm the trial court’s decision and certify it as final.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Dec 29, 2025

Sevier County lawyer James Ralph Hickman was censured by the Tennessee Supreme Court on Dec. 23. The court found that Hickman engaged in the unauthorized practice of law on July 10, 2023, and July 13, 2023, when he appeared in court on behalf of two clients and counseled the clients regarding the entry of guilty pleas while his license to practice law was suspended. His actions were determined to violate Tennessee Rule of Professional Conduct 5.5.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Dec 29, 2025

The Tennessee Supreme Court has issued Rule 56 to create the Appointed Counsel Commission, define its purpose and composition, set forth its duties, and establish requirements for appointment of counsel. The adoption of the rule comes after the governor proposed, and the General Assembly appropriated, funds for the Administrative Office of the Courts to establish the commission, the purpose of which is to retain and provide counsel in certain civil and criminal proceedings in which an indigent party has a right to appointed counsel. The new rule took effect immediately. Read more about the commission in past coverage from TBA Today.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Dec 29, 2025

Judges across Tennessee are adopting stricter, county-by-county measures to ensure people ordered to relinquish firearms in domestic violence cases are actually giving them up, according to reporting by WPLN News and ProPublica. The move comes after a proposed statewide reform stalled. According to the news sources, the shift was inspired by reforms in Scott County, which require written affidavits identifying who will take custody of surrendered guns and signed confirmation from the recipients — steps which are not required under the state’s standard form. At least nine counties, including Davidson and Shelby, have amended their gun dispossession affidavits as advocates warn that gaps in enforcement leave victims at risk.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Dec 29, 2025

Tennessee lawmakers voted unanimously to extend Tennessee State University’s (TSU) Board of Trustees for three years, signaling renewed confidence in the leadership of the state’s only historically Black and land-grant university following years of underfunding and state intervention, the Tennessee Lookout reports. The decision, made by a joint Government Operations Committee, comes after the legislature replaced TSU’s board in 2024 and amid ongoing efforts by new President Dwayne Tucker and trustees to stabilize operations and address decades of underfunding. Lawmakers praised recent progress and the university’s recent memorandum of understanding with the state allowing the use of $96 million in grant funds for operations and prior emergency state funding to support payroll and finances.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Dec 29, 2025

Another inmate has died at the Shelby County Jail, The Daily Memphian reports. Marcel Hutton, died Dec. 21 at 201 Poplar. Jail staff and a nurse with the jail’s third-party medical provider, WellPath, began lifesaving measures, but Hutton died less than an hour later, according to an email from the sheriff’s office. The cause of death remains under investigation, and the sheriff’s office did not specify whether the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation has been contacted. Hutton is at least the 13th person in custody of the sheriff’s office to die in 2025.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Dec 29, 2025

Tennessee Attorney General (AG) Jonathan Skrmetti's office has shut down multiple illegal online sweepstakes casinos across the state. The action is part of an ongoing effort to protect Tennesseans from predatory and unregulated gambling operations, according to a press release. Skrmetti issued formal cease-and-desist letters to nearly 40 online sweepstakes platforms, all of which have either disabled the unlawful components of their sites or agreed to wind down operations in the coming weeks. The promotional sweepstakes model used by these casinos is considered an illegal lottery under the Tennessee Constitution and violates state gambling and consumer protection laws, according to the AG's office.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Dec 29, 2025

A Tennessee lawmaker has filed legislation that would require public schools to administer the Presidential Fitness Test to assess student health and physical fitness. Rep. Scott Cepicky, R-Culleoka, introduced HB1466 last week. It would mandate schools conduct the test, measuring strength, endurance and flexibility. According to News Channel 5, under the bill, the Tennessee Department of Education would provide guidance to local school districts and public charter schools, and students who meet standards could receive a Presidential Fitness Award. Students with individualized education programs would receive accommodations and would not be required to participate if it is unsafe. President Donald Trump signed an executive order on July 31 reviving the test at the federal level. The second session of the 114th General Assembly is scheduled to convene Jan. 13, 2026.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Dec 29, 2025

The TBA Pro Bono Portal provides a centralized source for lawyers and law students to find pro bono opportunities across Tennessee, like the following case through Legal Aid of East Tennessee. In this situation, a client is seeking legal assistance to obtain a delayed birth certificate for her child, who was born at home in McMinn County. Get more information about the requirements associated with this opportunity and browse other pro bono needs.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Dec 29, 2025

Braden Boucek was sworn in Dec. 24 as U.S. attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee. Judge Whitney Hermandorfer of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit administered the oath of office during a brief ceremony at the Fred D. Thompson Federal Courthouse in Nashville. Boucek was nominated by President Donald Trump on July 1 and confirmed by the U.S. Senate on Dec. 18. As U.S. attorney, he serves as the chief federal prosecutor and legal representative for the United States in 32 counties across Middle Tennessee, representing approximately 2.9 million residents. Before his appointment, Boucek served as senior vice president of litigation at the Southeastern Legal Foundation and previously as vice president of legal affairs at the Beacon Center. He earned his law degree from Florida State University College of Law.


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