Archives
July 27, 2021
Column
- LEGAL PEOPLE
- MY TURN: Fond farewells destined to keep their spirits alive
- COMMENTARY: The fight over voting rights
- COMMENTARY: Key questions when offering vaccination incentives
State
- Michigan Creditors Bar Association hosting golf outing at Red Run
- 'Luncheon Limine' program to focus on criminal court, August 26
- College admissions consultant to appear at Community House
- Helping hand: Law student helps form Detroit Benevolent Society
- Author's new book offers hope for narrowing nation's divide
- Inventors Club teams with Detroit Public Schools community district students and local patent attorneys, innovation and ideas result
- Michigan Judges Association planning Annual Conference
- OCBA seminar scheduled on 'Marijuana + Minors'
- 'Appeals 101' training offered online by PAAM
- Oakland County reaches 70 percent vaccine goal, not done immunizing
- Detroit-area city will provide ballots in Bengali language
- Coulter names Solon M. Phillips corporation counsel
Business
Nation
- Webcast to explore 'Electronic Information in Criminal Matters'
- Police reform, cryptocurrency, voter suppression among highlights at ABA Annual Meeting August 4-10
Feature
headlines Oakland County
- Holiday Gala
- Nessel urges Michigan Supreme Court to adopt courthouse civil arrest protections
- Levin Center for Oversight and Democracy welcomes Zack Schram as Senior Congressional Oversight Fellow
- Oakland County backs state decision to align Michigan’s vaccine guidance with pediatric experts
- Civil Rights Division obtains settlement with a Michigan IT company for discriminating against U.S. workers
headlines National
- Former judge sentenced to 12 years in prison for using public funds for vacations, personal purchases
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Attorney sentenced to 25 years in prison after taking client money for gambling
- Ex-DLA Piper partner accused of assault by former associate
- Legal leaders shoulder more stress, new survey shows
- Some noncitizens may have Second Amendment rights, federal appeals court says




