State Bar & Bar Associations, Legal Education
Provisional licensing is a better option than diploma privilege
By James Lamb
Advocates characterize diploma privilege as a reasonable defense of students who navigate strained finances, immigration strug...
Wednesday is the half century anniversary of the environmental movement.
Law Practice
Guardian ad litem process raises serious constitutional issues
By Thomas F. Coleman
The appointment of a guardian ad litem in civil litigation is usually done under the radar and therefore avoids public scrutin...
U.S. Supreme Court, Government, Constitutional Law
Coronavirus and the Constitution: What powers do federal and state authorities have to fight a pandemic?
By Jacob M. McIntosh, Josh McDaniel
Quarantines, business shutdown orders, and stay-at-home orders may be effective weapons in the global fight against COVID-19, ...
Civil Litigation, California Supreme Court
Another look at the state Supreme Court’s inverse condemnation ruling in City of Oroville
By Mark S. Roth
The California Supreme Court, for the first time in more than two decades, recently waded into the murky inverse condemnation ...
Judges and Judiciary, Civil Litigation
When will civil litigation return to normal?
By Kevin C. Brazile
I hear the clamor at the courthouse doors: “I need this pandemic thing to end, at least in so far as it interferes with my lit...
Civil Litigation, Alternative Dispute Resolution
Tips for securing third-party witnesses in arbitration
By Ann Kough
I have been an arbitrator for 18 years (and was a sitting judge before that). It has been my experience that attorneys, even t...
Proliferation of streaming video services could lead to increased regulations and taxes on OTT providers
By Timothy B. Yoo
The biggest media trend of the last decade was the widespread adoption of over-the-top, or OTT, streaming services such as Net...
Civil Litigation
Telephonic hearings in civil cases: A solution to closure
By Raphael Metzger
Education Law
Lessons learned from the USC Title IX investigation of George Tyndall
By Karen A. Feld
University of Southern California and the Office of Civil Rights recently entered into a resolution agreement putting a (tenta...
3 types of facts
By Frank H. Wu
Law professors have the habit of making three points.
Forging important shifts in the law
By Charles M. Kagay
Former White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel famously said, “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste,” meaning that o...
Picking up where we left off last column, the conversation continues between the old-timer (me) and my young associate (“YA”) ...
Triage in the courthouse
By Scott M. Gordon
When disasters occur, this means challenging decisions have to be made. In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic dedicated health ...
Small Business Administration revises game plan the night before kick off
By Phil Jelsma
A core component of the $2.2 trillion COVID-19 stimulus package allows the Small Business Administration to create a Paycheck ...
The USPTO responds to coronavirus: all digital, all the time
By Dennis Loomis
The social distancing regimen triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted – and outside the home mostly suspended – in-pe...
The city of Los Angeles requires FFCRA-like paid leave
By Ann Marie Zaletel
In the wake of the federal Families First Coronavirus Response Act, local governments have begun enacting ordinances designed ...
Insurance, Government
COVID-19 catches the eye of the California insurance commissioner
By Jonathan F. Bank, Norris W. Clark
This week the California insurance commissioner issued a bulletin and a notice to insurance entities in response to the COVID-...
Military Law, Law Practice, Civil Rights
Veterans on active duty for veterans
By Eileen C. Moore
Veteran service organizations fight for and support veterans as new concerns arise, including veterans’ issues resulting from ...
Government, Banking, Administrative/Regulatory
Despite rapid growth of regulated cannabis markets across the U.S. and its territories, conflicting federal and state laws con...
Government, Education Law, Administrative/Regulatory
Medical marijuana makes its way into California K-12 schools
By Frances Rogers, Kate S. Im
In October 2019, California became the ninth state to allow administration of medical marijuana to K-12 students on school gro...
Law Practice
Conducting a deposition online during the COVID-19 pandemic
By Drew A. Harbur
I conducted a deposition over Zoom (and survived).
Law Practice, Ethics/Professional Responsibility
Strategies for law firms in responding to COVID-19
By Shari L. Klevens, Alanna G. Clair
According to one recent COVID-19 survey, 74% of law firm respondents expect that there will be a modest to severe impact on le...
Insurance
Insurers should have been better prepared for the virus
By Richard C. Giller
Over the past several weeks, news reports and their accompanying headlines have signaled what could be a pitched battle betwee...
Should you hire an M&A Attorney or an Investment banker first to sell your business?
A worthwhile image from past catastrophe to help guide us through the current coronal version is the conversation John Maynard...
Given the rise of the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic, it is safe to assume the world as we know it has changed and even a r...
Letters, Criminal
Criminal justice’s COVID-19 response is a collective responsibility
By Gay C. Grunfeld
I write in response to the April article, “Zero Cash Bail Order Could Show Whether the Idea is Good or Bad.”
Judges and Judiciary, Criminal
Courage in the time of COVID-19
By Oscar Bobrow, Robin Lipetzky
The chief justice of the California Supreme Court, Tani Cantil-Sakauye, is a leader who deserves special recognition as a beac...
Labor/Employment, Government
An overview of upcoming COVID-19-related actions from the Los Angeles City Council
By Brandon Young, Jacob Itzkowitz
Local governments have met the unprecedented circumstances surrounding COVID-19 with unprecedented changes in law. This is esp...