TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Paul Burch on Feb 9, 2024
News Type: Legal News

Shelby County Criminal Court Division 10 Judge Jennifer Mitchell has ruled that a jury from outside Shelby County will be brought in to hear the case of two men accused of killing Memphis rapper Young Dolph. According to the Daily Memphian, the request was made by defendant Justin Johnson’s lawyer, who argued at a hearing last week that Johnson can not get a fair trial before Memphis jurors due to “public visceral outrage” over the slaying. Shelby County Deputy District Attorney Paul Hagerman told reporters after the ruling that he has not yet determined the Tennessee jurisdiction from which  the jury will be pulled. The trial will still be held in Memphis.

Posted by: Paul Burch on Feb 9, 2024
News Type: Legal News

The federal trial for four former police officers accused of killing Tyre Nichols last year has been pushed back four months to Sept. 9, reports the Daily Memphian. U.S. District Judge Mark Norris granted the motion after defense lawyers asked for more time to effectively prepare their case, a process they say includes reviewing 800 gigabytes of video, documents and other evidence given to them by prosecutors. Lawyers for the officers as well as federal prosecutors agreed that the trial will take about three weeks.

Posted by: Paul Burch on Feb 9, 2024
News Type: Legal News

Nashville Law Director Wally Dietz told members of the Metro Arts Commission in a letter Wednesday that the commission needs greater financial oversight and an outside law firm has been hired to investigate multiple complaints made against the body. The letter, described by the Nashville Banner, includes an update from Metro Finance Director Kevin Crumbo, who says that completion of an internal audit ordered in December is still weeks away, but that surplus funds from the fiscal year 2023 budget “will not be made immediately available until the Arts Commission can demonstrate its operations are stable and that its financial affairs are in good order.”

Posted by: Paul Burch on Feb 9, 2024
News Type: Legal News

Francis M. Hamilton III, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Tennessee, announced that his office collected $12,352,268 in fiscal year 2023. Of that amount, $3,130,283 was collected in criminal actions and $9,221,985 was collected in civil actions. Additionally, the office, working with partner agencies, collected $1,610,245 in asset forfeiture actions, including $11,345 for victim compensation. Forfeited assets deposited into the Department of Justice Assets Forfeiture Fund are used to restore funds to crime victims and other law enforcement purposes. Read more in a press release.

Posted by: Paul Burch on Feb 9, 2024
News Type: Legal News

Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti this week joined a 23-state coalition protesting the Biden administration and the Department of Energy’s temporary “pause” on the export of liquified natural gas (LNG). “The Administration’s LNG export pause is illegal and will hurt America’s national security,” Skrmetti said in a statement. The attorneys general also warned that the Department of Energy lacks authority to issue blanket denials for export permits without an act of Congress. The United States is the world’s largest producer of LNG, according to the group. Read the full letter.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 8, 2024
News Type: Legal News

The Smith County Board of Education and Board of Commissioners recently reached a settlement in a lawsuit that was filed last November. The suit alleged that the county violated the Open Meetings Act by not giving proper public notice of meetings and that certain commission members met and/or deliberated privately regarding county finances, reports the Smith County Insider. In a joint statement, the two parties said, "Throughout the process, it has been the Board of Education’s goal to be in a position to continue to provide outstanding educational opportunities to Smith County students. Likewise, the county commissioners sought to find a solution that allows county services to be delivered in a manner that creates the least burden on the taxpayer. The resolution of the issues provides a mechanism for both public bodies to 'have a seat at the table,' for the implementation of policies and procedures, and to move forward."

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 8, 2024
News Type: Legal News

A Georgia woman, Bianca Clayborne, has filed a lawsuit alleging her constitutional rights and those of her children were violated by Tennessee law enforcement officers and state social workers following a misdemeanor traffic stop last February. The lawsuit names four Tennessee Highway Patrol officers involved in the traffic stop, three Department of Children’s Services (DCS) caseworkers who obtained a court order to take the children, 10 Coffee County Sheriff Department officers who detained the family at the county’s jail and Coffee County, which is responsible its officers’ supervision and training, reports the Tennessee Lookout. The traffic stop for “dark tint and not actively passing” on Interstate-24 culminated in the arrest of Clayborne's partner, Deonte Williams, and all five children being placed in foster care for 55 days. In a search of the car, troopers found fewer than five grams of marijuana — a misdemeanor offense which typically receives a citation, according to the news source.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 8, 2024
News Type: Legal News

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has declared that calls made with AI-generated voices are illegal. The decision comes after a fake robocall imitating President Joe Biden sought to dissuade people from voting for him in New Hampshire's Democratic primary election. Reuters reports that the FCC noted that state attorneys general previously could target the outcome of an unwanted AI-voice-generated robocall, but the new action makes the act of using AI to generate a voice in these robocalls itself illegal. On Tuesday, Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti joined 50 other bipartisan attorneys general on the nationwide Anti-Robocall Multistate Litigation Task Force in sending a warning letter to Life Corporation (Life Corp), the company allegedly behind the New Hampshire robocalls. “Using AI to spam voters’ phones with robocalls and inaccurate election information is illegal and fundamentally anti-American. Not to mention, it’s creepy,” Skrmetti said in a statement.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 8, 2024

Jonathan Cole, a shareholder in the Nashville office of Baker Donelson, has been nominated by the American Bar Association (ABA) House of Delegates as chair-elect of the 597-member policymaking body for a two-year term that begins after the Annual Meeting this August. The position is the second ranking officer in the ABA and serves as its chief policy officer. Cole has served as chair of the ABA Standing Committee on Bar Activities and Services and the ABA Young Lawyers Division, and he is past president of the National Conference of Bar Presidents and the Nashville Bar Association. The HOD's 69-member nominating committee endorsed Cole over William D. Johnston of Delaware in a contested election during the ABA Midyear Meeting in Louisville, Kentucky. See a photo from the meeting. In other leadership news, Wisconsin lawyer Michelle Behnke was nominated as the ABA's president for 2025-2026. The HOD will formally vote on her election at the August meeting.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 8, 2024
News Type: Legal News

A federal grand jury in Memphis returned a superseding indictment yesterday bringing new charges against three alleged members of the Unknown Vice Lords (UVL) — Ghost Mob, a criminal street gang, for causing the death of an individual through the use of a firearm during a crime of violence. According to a press release from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Western District of Tennessee, the charges are the first to be brought as part of the Memphis Violent Crime Initiative. As part of the initiative, the U.S. Justice Department's Criminal Division has dedicated attorneys and other resources to prosecuting violent offenders and assisting intervention, prevention and reentry efforts to address the root causes of violent crime.


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