IndyBar: IndyBar’s ‘MPRE 101’ Podcast Sees Over 550 Downloads in First Two Weeks
IndyBar’s MPRE Review Course, traditionally held three times a year, has transitioned to a podcast format.
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IndyBar’s MPRE Review Course, traditionally held three times a year, has transitioned to a podcast format.
From neighborhood disputes to landlord-tenant quarrels, the Indy Center for Conflict Resolution works to solve issues in Indianapolis before they escalate.
With a passion for community outreach, Warren Circuit Court Judge Hunter Reece said he enjoys being on the bench and finds it important to get more attorneys into rural communities.
A growing number of companies in Indiana and elsewhere are hoping to offer new legal protection for top executives following a 2022 change in Delaware’s corporation law.
Here’s how to craft arbitration provisions that are consistent with the three well-established goals of arbitration: expertise in the subject-matter area; lower costs; and quicker resolution.
While it is still wise to give side eye and skepticism to artificial intelligence in the legal field at large, there is also much to be gained from the use and integration of artificial intelligence in the legal industry.
This inaugural social is designed to foster connection, camaraderie, and belonging within our Indianapolis legal community.
Indianapolis criminal defense attorney Robert Hammerle gives us his take on “The Holdovers” and “The Zone of Interest.”
Local Rules 56-1 in the Southern District of Indiana and Northern District of Indiana govern summary judgment procedure and are critical in summary judgment practice. Both similarly require the movant to support its motion with a statement of material facts not in dispute with supporting evidence.
IndyBar provides access to three necessary services to complete a bar exam application: obtaining certified copies of BMV records, an updated passport photo for identification, and fingerprinting.
The use of artificial intelligence, and concerns about how safe and secure it is, is an area of discussion that’s touching all facets of law, including mediation, arbitration and alternative dispute resolution
John Hanley is in his 30th year as a Marion Superior Court judge.
Youth First partners with 125 schools in 14 counties in southwest and near-central Indiana to give over 52,500 students and their families free, easy access to licensed mental health professionals, primarily master’s level social workers, placed directly in schools.
Young attorneys should not get discouraged by their lack of actual trial experience, nor should they be any less confident in calling themselves litigators because we are using trial skills in daily practice.
New regulations under the Corporate Transparency Act require reporting companies to disclose certain information related to their beneficial owners.
While House Enrolled Act 1412 will undo local regulations in Indianapolis and several other Hoosier cities that ban the retail sale of dogs at pet stores, it will impose new regulations on an entire range of businesses involved in the selling of dogs.
7th Circuit Court of Appeals
Brenda K. Warnell v. Martin J. O’Malley, Commissioner of Social Security
23-1632
Civil. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Fort Wayne Division. Judge William Lee. Affirms the administrative law judge’s determination that Brenda Warnell is not disabled and therefore not entitled to disability benefits or supplemental security income. Finds the ALJ provided a more than sufficient explanation for why the medical record led her to deny Warnell’s claim. Also finds the judge acknowledged and grappled with conflicting evidence, ultimately concluding that the treatment record as a whole supports a finding of non-disability.
The Monroe Circuit Court erred when it ordered the Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles and its commissioner to include a third-gender option on driver’s licenses and identification cards, the Indiana Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday.
Indiana Supreme Court approved the transfer of two Court of Appeals cases last week, denying 31 others that came before the justices.
A former U.S. congressman from Indiana and an ex-Bartholomew County prosecutor have been suspended from practicing law in the state, according to orders issued Friday by the Indiana Supreme Court.