January 9, 2009
Michael HoskinsA newly appointed federal magistrate in Indianapolis denies any misconduct or knowledge of wrongdoing that a judge says happened
during a clean air trial last spring prior to her taking the bench.
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January 1, 2009
Michael HoskinsA federal judge has sanctioned an Indianapolis law firm that employed a few attorneys he says helped abuse the discovery process,
failed to correct misleading or false statements made by its client, and didn't properly turn over to the court or opposing
counsel key documents relating to an environmental contamination case out of Southern Indiana.In a 66-page order issued Friday,
U.S. District Judge Larry McKinney in the Southern District of Indiana determined that Bose McKinney & Evans should be sanctioned
for...
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January 1, 2009
Elizabeth BrockettThe fifth largest Indianapolis law firm is laying off 10 attorneys, two paralegals, and 13 support staff because of the tumultuous
economy.Bose McKinney & Evans managing partner Ken Crook, who announced the layoffs today, told Indiana Lawyer that all the
cuts were in the downtown Indianapolis office. The layoffs affected employees in the litigation, business, real estate, and
intellectual property practice groups. Crook said the recession continues to affect the firm's clients and therefore certain
practices within the firm. He added,...
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January 1, 2009
Elizabeth BrockettBarnes & Thornburg has opened its ninth office nationwide in Columbus, Ohio, and its second new office in as many weeks.
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December 22, 2008
Michael HoskinsA Muncie law firm will remain intact after both of its longtime partners take the bench in January.
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December 16, 2008
Jennifer NelsonAn Evansville defense attorney was found dead this morning by police after committing suicide, according to the Vanderburgh
County deputy coroner.
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December 12, 2008
Michael HoskinsTough economic times are causing law firms across the country to consider staff cuts as a way to trim costs, and the Indiana
legal market isn't an exception.
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December 4, 2008
Michael HoskinsOne of Indiana's largest law firms is merging with a Kentucky-based firm in a move to become more of a regional and national
player.
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November 7, 2008
Jennifer NelsonA former chief judge of the Indiana Court of Appeals and a founder of the Indianapolis Bar Foundation died Thursday.
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November 7, 2008
Michael HoskinsAn Indianapolis defense attorney who is nationally recognized as a death-penalty expert capped a two-month trial in New Hampshire
this week, successfully keeping her client off death row and preventing him from becoming the first person to be executed
in that state in 70 years.
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October 28, 2008
IL StaffFor the second time this year, a Baker & Daniels attorney has been named athletic director at a university in the state.
Indiana University selected partner Fred Glass as its new athletic director today.
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October 23, 2008
Jennifer NelsonA Bremen attorney was found dead Oct. 20 by police in a field in northern Indiana. Ronald Sowers, 70, died from a self-inflicted
gunshot wound to the chest.
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October 22, 2008
Jennifer NelsonA federal grand jury in Hammond has indicted a Schererville attorney with two counts of wire fraud and one count of mail fraud
after being accused of stealing money from two clients.
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October 15, 2008
Michael HoskinsHoosiers will soon be asked whether "ambulance chasing" attorneys should have to wait 30 days after an accident or injury
before directly contacting potential clients by mail.
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October 15, 2008
Michael HoskinsTwo Indianapolis law firm partners wonder why they were not given a chance to prevent potential lawyer advertising violations
as colleagues have been given off and on through the years.
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October 14, 2008
Michael HoskinsIn what is believed to be the highest-ever payout of its kind in the state, the Indiana Department of Insurance will
receive $16.5 million from a national legal malpractice insurer as part of a federal lawsuit settlement.
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October 13, 2008
Michael HoskinsA legal malpractice insurance carrier has agreed to pay $16.5 million to Indiana's insurance department, settling a federal
lawsuit that had come on the heels of a state malpractice claim where an Indianapolis law firm got hit with an $18 million
verdict.
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October 8, 2008
IL StaffThe Wishard Medical-Legal Partnership for Patient Health has received a Preventative Medicine and Public Health Award from
the Indiana Public Health Foundation for its efforts to improve health care for children.
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October 7, 2008
Rebecca BerfangerAfter seeing the film "Flash of Genius," about a man who sued the auto industry over what he claimed was his design
for intermittent windshield wipers, an Indianapolis attorney who represented Mercedes (Daimler-Benz Aktiengesellschaft) against
the real life Bob Kearns has his own take on the film.
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September 16, 2008
Jennifer NelsonVirginia O'Leary, a prominent employment attorney in southern Indiana, died yesterday at the age of 74. O'Leary spent
more than 30 years representing women and minorities seeking equal employment opportunities.
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September 5, 2008
Jennifer NelsonTwo partners in the Indianapolis law firm Benkie & Crawford received public reprimands from the Indiana Supreme Court
Thursday for attorney misconduct in their advertisements for legal services.
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September 4, 2008
Michael HoskinsAn intellectual property licensing firm in Fishers has lost a federal lawsuit involving iconic images of the late actress
Marilyn Monroe and the right of publicity.
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August 29, 2008
Jennifer NelsonMark W. Gray, a founding partner of Indianapolis-based Kightlinger & Gray, died Aug. 27 after a nearly four-year struggle
with heart disease and cancer. He was 91.
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July 17, 2008
Michael HoskinsA longtime partner at Baker & Daniels' Indianapolis office is leaving the law firm after 28 years to become the new
athletic director at his alma mater, the University of Notre Dame.
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January 1, 2008
IL StaffIndianapolis-based law firm Ice Miller has been ranked as one of the 50 best law firms in the country for women, according
to Working Mother magazine and Flex-Time Lawyers. It is the only Indiana-based law firm to make the list this year.The firm
was chosen based on the fact that it allows attorneys to work reduced hours on a case-by-case basis, the number of leadership
roles held by women in the firm, and establishment of a "mothers' lounge" for women who...
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Judge Roger B. Cosbey is unethical and bias toward African American who seeks justice in Title VII claims. He disrespected and used his authority to attempt to intimidate me into taking an unfair settlement and when I refused he proceeded to get my case dismissed and to deny me my Constitutional and Civil Rights. He disobeying several rules of law; specifically, by ruling on summary judgment motions against the Fed. R. Civ. P., without authority of Judge William C. Lee, without consent of the attorneys, and with conspiracy to commit “fraud on the court,” as he conspired with my former attorney. He proved to me that he is bias, unethical, unfair and unfit to be reappointed. In my opinion, he should be disbarred in 2013, for committing fraud on the court, which would make him ineligible for reinstatement in 2014. See docket 3:07 cv 629 where he rules on dispositive motions, knowing magistrates are not vested with that power (especially without consent), grants the defendant an unconscionable number of extensions, accepts my former attorney request for extension for dispositive motion knowing he was working with the opposition, and unbelievably grants the defendant another extension after he requested an extension after he missed the deadline. I know another attorney filed charges against him for bias in race discrimination case(s). I know what he did in my case before he voluntarily recused himself, I just do not know how many other innocent people have been stripped of their rights because of him. I say shame on him and no more of the same.
they are pushing these cases against lawyers too far. thought-crime.
vagueness cannot challenged, so let's write all laws vaguely and throw the constitution out the window.Even if the court is operating under a particular law, if they don't it they will change it to their liking. What a joke!!!
Two convictions becomes one conviction with exactly the same sentence, only it is not clear wheter or not that sentence will be 18 months, 120 months or 138 months. Actually if the guns were in a home, whether or not they were his, he is protected under the 2nd amendment. Jurors need to learn the law and the constitution before judging others. The cour5ts need to do this as well.
With all due respect, Rick, I think you probably would be making a mistake by going to law school. The job market for attorneys is so saturated, you may well find yourself unemployed and with a lot of debt. You mention law would be a good supplement to your skills. True. But employers unfortunately don't value that. You will find that a law degree may well pigeonhole you into an attorney slot and limit career options. If you have a good job now I would hold onto that. As an attorney, you may well end up making less with the aforementioned debt.