Monday, November 10, 2014

Houston Legal Links 11/10/14

Originally published by .


Top legal news includes: State Rep. Reynolds convicted in solicitation of professional conduct case; Former IRS worker, U.S. reach agreement in ritual dagger case; 20 Attorneys Disciplined, several are prominent Houston area lawyers; City paying jobs incentive despite CSN layoffs (Chron subsc); Super Bowl rings taken in burglary at Houston Texans coach’s home; Protesters picket several Houston-area churches Sunday; Texas Railroad Commission to continue drill permits in Denton; Oil boom turns neighbors against each other (Chron subsc.); Kroger ‘severe sexual harassment’ turned violent, lawsuit claims; ‘Weird sickos’ arrested in child solicitation sting; Iraqi ambassador says negotiations continue with Kurdistan over oil; Second lawsuit filed challenging city fundraising rules (Chron subsc); Grits: TDCJ: Prison healthcare needs $178 million more to meet ‘minimum standards’; Classrooms vandalized, flag burned at Texas school; Obama Action on Immigration Could Benefit Texas Economy; Facebook page leads police to South Texas phone theft ring; Transocean expects $2.76 billion in writedowns; Houston energy companies among LinkedIn’s most in-demand employers; Now energy-rich, Israel seeks oil and gas partners & KiOR says it owes $312 million because it missed payment.


For the water cooler: FBI director: Agent’s fake claim to be AP reporter ‘appropriate’; news agency outraged; Woman sues nail salon, says pedicure resulted in leg amputation; Judge OKs criminal case against former Dewey leaders, grants separate trial to lower-level worker; Judge wins re-election but is now too old to serve on bench; When Bar Scores Plummet, Who Will Examine The Examiners?; 80 Law Schools Are at Risk of Closure, Mostly in California, Florida, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania; The Thrill Of Motion Practice On ‘How To Get Away With Murder’; Judge struck by wrong-way driver outside Las Vegas courthouse; Citing pending SCOTUS fish case, judge delays sentencing for friends of accused Boston bomber; Bingham and Edwards Wildman shed lawyers ahead of potential mergers; Legal Services Sector Down 2,000 Jobs Since January; UPDATE: Rick Springfield’s Butt Will Face Retrial; Wiley Rein is casting off its bankruptcy group & Seyfarth partner pursues a new career as a high school teacher.


Curated by Texas Bar Today. Follow us on Twitter @texasbartoday.






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