Archives
July 06, 2015
Feature
- Reunification Day
- Monday Profile: Nick Leydorf
- Attorney teams with businesses to help homeless
- Asked and Answered . . .
State
Business
- Asked & Answered Frank Eaman on Indigent Defense
- Attorney teams with area business to help homeless
- Asked & Answered Frank Eaman on Indigent Defense
- Reunification Day Washtenaw Trial Court celebrates event
- Reunification Day Washtenaw Trial Court celebrates event
- Asked & Answered Frank Eaman on Indigent Defense
- Monday Profile Nick Leydorf
- MSU law clinic offers real life experiences for students
- MSU Law offers something
- Foster Swift sponsors festival event
- Attorney teams with businesses to help homeless
- Frank Eaman on Indigent Defense
- Reunification Day Washtenaw Trial Court celebrates event
- Foster Swift sponsors festival event
- Monday Profile Nick Leydorf
- Asked & Answered Frank Eaman on Indigent Defense
- MSU law clinic offers real life experiences for students
- MSU Law offers something
- Attorney teams with area business to help homeless
- Attorney teams with businesses to help homeless
- Frank Eaman on Indigent Defense
- Asked & Answered Frank Eaman on Indigent Defense
headlines Ingham County
- Cooley Law School Innocence Project hosts wrongful conviction discussion at Alpena Community College
- Michigan Retailers Association names Sen. Santana 2023 Legislator of the Year
- Groups of court reporters rally at State Capitol for fair pay
- Former Michigan House Legislative Director Josiah Kissling joins Plunkett Cooney in Lansing as a client advisor
- On the bench: Mission-driven leadership by Detroit Mercy Law alums
headlines National
- More lawyers—and clients—want to learn about sustainable development practices
- Top artificial intelligence insurance tips for lawyers
- Lawyer charged with illegally transmitting Michigan data after 2020 election
- Viral video shows former Rikers Island inmate as she learns she passed bar exam on first try
- How Sullivan & Cromwell is scrutinizing potential new hires after campus protests
- No separate hearing required when police seize cars loaned to drivers accused of drug crimes, SCOTUS rules