Don’t miss this introductory look at the issues to be aware of during your next DUI and traffic-related case.
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April 15, 2022 | CLE

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April 13, 2022 | Events | ISBA News
Join ISBA President Elect Rory T. Weiler and his wife, Sue, for an awe-inspiring tour across Italy. View the complete info for the 2022 ISBA President’s Trip. The trip is scheduled to take place September 10-18, 2022. -
April 13, 2022 | People
The Honorable Judge James (Jim) M. Wexstten, 71, passed away at Greentree Assisted Living and Memory Care in Mount Vernon, Illinois, on April 10, 2022. Jim was born on April 29, 1950, in Pana, Illinois, to the late Henry and Doris (Ruppert) Wexstten. Jim grew up in Nokomis, Illinois. Jim married Darla Smith Wisely on August 3, 1982, in Breckenridge, Colorado. -
April 13, 2022 | Practice News
The Illinois Supreme Court announced today new appointments to the Supreme Court e-Business Policy Advisory Board (the Board) effective immediately. -
April 13, 2022 | CLE
Don’t miss this presentation on the basics of drafting wills, as well as the related estate planning considerations, including when clients opt to utilize wills as a primary estate planning tool. -
April 13, 2022 | CLE
Regulation F, which was issued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), governs debt collection practices, as well as supplements and expands the requirements of the Federal Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA). Join us for this comprehensive overview of the CFPB’s newest regulation, its impact on debt collection, how it allows modern day communication methods, and provides some safe harbors. -
April 12, 2022 | Practice News
The Illinois Supreme Court announced today a new order establishing the Supreme Court Commission on Elder Law (Commission). -
April 11, 2022 | Practice News
The Illinois Supreme Court issued one opinion on Thursday, April 7. -
April 11, 2022 | Practice News
The “absurdity” of pleading mutually exclusive alternative facts has long been a target for those looking to poke fun at attorneys for being dishonest or unscrupulous, writes Jake Crabbs in his April Illinois Bar Journal article, “A Broken Kettle of Fish.” The title of Crabbs’ article alludes to an old joke about a man sued for breaking a borrowed kettle: First, the man argued that he “never borrowed the kettle; second, that it was cracked when he borrowed it; and third, that it was sound when he carried it back.” Crabbs states that a lack of personal knowledge is the touchstone of proper alternative fact pleading, and goes on to explain why alternative fact pleading is a useful, and sometimes necessary, legal tactic. -
April 5, 2022 | ISBA News
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