Articles

All Content


73,828 Posts found
Previous • Page 206 of 7,383 • Next
Posted by: Azya Thornton on Jan 7, 2026

MURPHY, Circuit Judge. After Kevin Daniels committed an armed robbery, a jury convicted him of robbery and firearm offenses. The district court sentenced him to 181 months’ imprisonment. Daniels now raises eight issues on appeal. He claims that his convictions rest on constitutional, evidentiary, and instructional errors. And he claims that his sentence rests on mistaken guidelines calculations. Neither set of claims has merit. We thus affirm.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Jan 7, 2026

The Tennessee Bar Association is now offering membership at half dues rates. Join at the rate of $157.50 and get membership through June 30. Enjoy this discounted rate and still receive three free hours of CLE, TBA Today daily news, unlimited access to legal research in all 50 states and more. Lower dues rates also are available based on law-related income. Learn more about the benefits of membership and start the joining process here.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Jan 7, 2026

Defendant, Frank E. Fankam, was indicted by a Davidson County Grand Jury for one count of rape. A petit jury convicted Defendant as charged, and the trial court sentenced Defendant to ten years with one year to be served in confinement and nine years to be served on supervised probation. On appeal, Defendant asserts that: 1) it was plain error for the trial court to allow into evidence text messages between Defendant and the victim; 2) the State impermissibly delayed in bringing an indictment against him in order to gain a tactical advantage at trial; 3) the State committed prosecutorial misconduct in its cross- examination of Defendant and during closing argument; 4) the evidence was insufficient to sustain Defendant’s conviction; and 5) cumulative error requires reversal. Having reviewed the record and the arguments of the parties, we find no error and affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Jan 7, 2026

This is an appeal from an order dismissing an inmate’s Petition for Declaratory Judgment. Because the inmate did not file his notice of appeal with the Clerk of the Appellate Court within thirty days after entry of the order as required by Rule 4(a) of the Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure, we dismiss the appeal.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Jan 7, 2026

The appellants filed an accelerated interlocutory appeal from the trial court’s denial of a recusal motion pursuant to Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 10B. Due to numerous deficiencies in the motion, we affirm the trial court’s denial of the motion.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Jan 7, 2026

A Tennessee Senate panel has recommended a pilot program requiring detention officers at the privately run Trousdale Turner Correctional Center to wear body cameras following a 2025 riot at the facility, despite opposition from the state’s corrections commissioner, Tennessee Lookout reports. Lawmakers said body cameras could help protect officers and inmates and provide clearer evidence for criminal prosecutions, while Corrections Commissioner Frank Strada raised concerns about cost, privacy and the burden of reviewing video, instead promoting a central intelligence center using artificial intelligence and other technology. CoreCivic officials said the company would work with the state on policy but have not agreed to fund the equipment, as legislators continue to weigh oversight measures amid ongoing scrutiny of safety, staffing and violence at the prison.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Jan 7, 2026

Former Rep. Robin Smith, R-Hixson, will avoid jail time for her role in the Phoenix Solutions affair, the Nashville Banner newsletter reports. After co-conspirators — ex-Tennessee House Speaker Glen Casada and his former chief of staff, Cade Cothren — received presidential pardons, Smith filed a motion in federal court on Nov. 19 seeking reconsideration of her original sentence: eight months in prison and a $7,500 fine. Since turning government witness, Smith originally received a lighter sentence than Cothren (30 months, $25,000) and Casada (three years, $30,000). Prosecutors said in response to Smith’s motion that a year of probation with no conditions or fine was appropriate, and a federal court filing on Monday amended Smith’s sentence as such. She was originally scheduled to report to federal prison in West Virginia on Monday but will now remain free.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Jan 7, 2026

The Texas Supreme Court has ended the state’s reliance on the American Bar Association (ABA) to accredit its law schools, finalizing a rule that places the state’s high court in charge of that certification, Bloomberg Law reports. The court issued preliminary approval in September but continued to solicit public comments throughout the fall. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission weighed in with support in December, calling the ABA a monopoly. In its Jan. 6 order, the court said it intends to ensure that law degrees from Texas schools are portable to other states and vice versa, and does not plan to impose additional burdens on accreditation. The court added it would consider returning to a multi-state accreditation entity that is not the ABA “should a suitable entity become available.” In February 2025, the Trump administration threatened to pull the ABA’s accrediting power nationwide unless it ended its diversity requirements for law schools. The ABA agreed to temporarily suspend enforcement of its diversity and inclusion mandate. 

Texas’ move comes as the Tennessee Supreme Court is similarly examining whether to "modify, reduce or eliminate its reliance on ABA accreditation" as part of a broader review of legal education, licensure and regulatory structures, and whether there are any practicable alternatives that should be considered. Feedback on the court's order may be sent to TBA's newly formed Legal Access & Regulatory Reform Task Force at townhall@tnbar.org as well as directly to the court. Visit TBA's Legal Access & Regulatory Reform resource page for more information.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Jan 7, 2026

New Orleans-based McGlinchey Stafford has announced that it will cease operations. Established 52 years ago, the firm has 18 offices across the Southeast and Northeast, including in Nashville. According to the ABA Journal, equity partners voted to wind down operations after “assessing several strategic alternatives.” Deirdre McGlinchey, daughter of firm co-founder Dermot McGlinchey, was among recent departures, leaving along with several other attorneys for Jones Walker. McGlinchey’s Nashville office served corporate and individual clients with corporate formation, real estate closings, banking and regulatory compliance, trademark registration, entertainment, insurance defense, products liability defense, bankruptcy, loan workouts, and financial services and general civil litigation in all Tennessee state and federal courts.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Jan 7, 2026

For the second consecutive year, Gov. Bill Lee has opted out of a federally funded summer food assistance program that would serve hundreds of thousands of children from low-income families across Tennessee, the Nashville Post reports. The deadline for the state to enroll in the federal Summer EBT program was Jan. 1, and despite requests from lawmakers, religious leaders and food security advocates, Lee rejected roughly $84 million in federal funding. A spokesperson for the governor’s office told the Nashville Scene that Lee’s fiscal year 2027 budget proposal will include additional investments in state-run programs. 


Previous • Page 206 of 7,383 • Next