In 2009, the chief justice of New Hampshire's Supreme Court felt compelled to take an extreme step to keep the state's wider court system running. The poor funding situation for New Hampshire's judiciary had grown so dire that then-Chief Justice John Broderick Jr. reluctantly suspended civil jury trials for 12 months. In the short term, undermining a cornerstone of the American legal process provided necessary...
The U.S. has been the undisputed lawsuit capital of the world for some time. And while the courts play a central role in resolving disputes and maintaining a civil society, that function isn’t easy when they are packed with frivolous suits.
Ridiculous lawsuits clog up our legal system’s dwindling resources, taking time away from legitimate grievances to devote to the vindictive, the hypocritical, the...
What do Obamacare, preemption, and environmental regulation have in common? All are addressed in Supreme Court cases the business community should be keeping an eye on, according to former U.S. Solicitor General Paul Clement. In the accompanying video, Clement, now a partner at Bancroft PLLC, briefly summarizes the key cases of interest to business. Clement took part in a panel discussion on that...
Madison County Circuit Judge Barbara Crowder has been removed from administering the court’s asbestos docket a week after her campaign committee received $30,000 in contributions from asbestos plaintiffs’ lawyers whose firms had received “trial slots” on the court’s 2013 docket.
For at least a decade, the Madison County Asbestos docket calendar has assigned case slots to plaintiffs’ lawyers without actual court...
At our 12th Annual Legal Reform Summit on October 26th, we pulled aside Thurbert Baker, the former attorney general of Georgia and a partner at McKenna Long & Aldridge, and asked him to briefly explain why lawsuit lending is a problem. See the accompanying video for his response.