State Bar & Bar Associations
Lawyers, it’s time to step up to the plate and be poll workers
By Patricia Lee Refo
Lawyers, this is your cue: It’s time to step up to the plate. Especially young lawyers and law students.
Immigration, Constitutional Law, 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
Ruling is a sharp departure from the border search exception
By Jared C. Leung
A surprise decision came from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last week in which the court denied a petition by the gove...
Law Practice
Peremptory challenge bill awaits governor’s signature
By Allen L. Lanstra, Kasonni Scales
On Aug. 31, the California Legislature passed a bill that would strengthen the ability to challenge discrimination in the jury...
Law Practice, Covid Columns
No one has been paying attention for a while now
By D. Mark Jackson
What recent experiences with remote juries tell us about our distracted world
Covid Columns, Alternative Dispute Resolution
Arbitration during a global pandemic
By Daniel B. Garrie, Gail A. Andler
This article outlines a basic checklist designed for the convenience of counsel in furtherance of their meet and confer obliga...
Education Law, Corporate
Is outcry over racial injustice echoing in boardrooms and college admissions offices?
By Dario J. Frommer
This summer, amid headlines about national outrage and protest over the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and others at t...
Technology, Law Practice
Autonomous levels of artificial intelligence as applied to the law
By Lance Eliot
A new framework identifies the autonomous levels of AI legal reasoning and provides a much-needed means of comparing advances ...
What can you say about a ballot measure, ostensibly designed to enhance online data privacy, that is being opposed not only by...
Intellectual Property, Civil Litigation
Increasing the likelihood of attorney fee recovery in patent cases
By Dariush Adli
For patent infringement defendants, successful assertion of the following defenses measurably increases their chances for reco...
Probate Code Section 21380 can succeed where the ‘Slayer Rule’ fails.
Real Estate/Development, Land Use
Assembly Bill 1561 provides support for housing development projects
By Sheri L. Bonstelle
The bill will support housing development by allowing additional time for those with approved housing development projects to ...
Tax, Government, Civil Litigation, 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
FHA ruling: a decision that matches the moment
By Scott Chang
Last month, amidst widespread social unrest and calls for racial justice and the dismantling of structural racism in communiti...
Legislators, equal pay advocates, and other stakeholders have identified unchecked biases, historic inequities, legal loophole...
Next month, the U.S. Supreme Court set to consider when police can use deadly force
State Bar & Bar Associations, Legal Marketing
Provisional license program promises more than it can deliver
By Susan Smith Bakhshian
California’s provisional license program promises more than it can deliver. The problems range from practical challenges to sy...
I couldn’t help but be reminded of Stella Liebeck’s “windfall” while reading Shih v. Starbucks Corp., decided last week by the...
Tax, Covid Columns
Bill would align state, federal law on PPP loan forgiveness
By Phil Jelsma
Potentially impacting thousands of businesses, the California Legislature has passed Assembly Bill 1577, a bill that would con...
Labor/Employment, Covid Columns
Off-the-clock work by teleworkers: wage and hour pitfalls to avoid
By Robin E. Largent
Off-the-clock claims are not exactly new to the field of wage and hour litigation, but remote work presents timekeeping challe...
About writing, and running, and tennis.
Another missed chance to strengthen California’s False Claims Act
By Ari M. Yampolsky, Chris McLamb
For the second year in a row, the California State Assembly passed legislation to strengthen the California False Claims Act —...
We first opened our doors in downtown Los Angeles on Wednesday, Sept. 8, 1920 at 7:30 p.m. It was an evening-only program with...
State Bar & Bar Associations, Legal Education
HR 103 correctly seeks to lower the California Bar Exam cut score
By Joanna Mendoza
As a former member of the California State Bar Board of Trustees from 2013-2019, including having acted for several years as a...
Civil Litigation, Administrative/Regulatory
Coffee defendants grind out victory in battle over Prop 65 acrylamide warnings
By Willis M. Wagner
Last week, following nearly a decade of litigation, a Los Angeles Superior Court ruled in favor of a group of coffee defendant...
Who’s afraid of the FAA?
By Steven B. Katz
A recent appellate decision shows just how far the courts are willing to go to insulate California public policy from the pree...
In the military, Jackie Robinson took a stand within a racist system
U.S. Supreme Court, Constitutional Law, Books
Notorious RBG talks life, love, liberty and law
By Marc D. Alexander
“Conversations with RBG,” authored by Professor Jeffrey Rosen, is a good place to begin for a probing, yet concise, book about...
I have been a proponent of incorporating technology into law practice since I started practicing back in 1985. Now here I am, ...
Government, Constitutional Law
Who will defend the courts from attacks on the judiciary?
By James J. Brosnahan
President Donald Trump’s constant attacks on the judiciary are a violation of the separation of powers set out in the U.S. Con...
Letters, Civil Rights
Judge’s column on the ‘pattern of blame and harassment’ hits home
By Richard M. Stoll
I read Judge Rupa Goswami’s article and it hit home — hard.
Labor/Employment
Independent contractors and AB 2257: different year, same story
By Bruce J. Sarchet
At the zenith of the legislative session, 31 separate bills were under consideration to either amend or abandon AB 5. If, as e...