From:Access to Justice Law360 <[email protected]> To:. Subject:The $4.3B Question Over What Terrorist Victims Can Recoup Date:Mon, 24 Feb 2020 12:41:26 +0000 ;;,'Law36 0 Access to Justice Access to Justice Getty-A2J-Kenya.jpg The $4.3B Question Over What Terrorist Victims Can Recoup The U.S. Supreme Court during oral arguments on Monday will be asked to create a clearer path to punitive damages in certain cases involving state sponsors of terrorism. It's just the latest chapter in a case that highlights the decadeslong legal battles that terrorist victims and their families often face in trying to recoup damages. Read full article Analysis Ex-Felons In Fla. Race Against Clock To Vote In 2020 Former felons in the Sunshine State who are fighting a requirement that they pay all outstanding fines and fees before being able to vote may have scored a recent win at the Eleventh Circuit, but with just eight months to go before the general election and the state vowing to battle on, time may be running out fo them to cast a ballot in 2020. Read full article Analysis ABA Says Industry Regs Need A Rethink, But Will It Matter? The passage of a revised American Bar Association resolution intended to encourage a new look at legal industry regulation and increase access to justice represents a major step forward, even in the absence of any recommended changes on nonlawyer participation in the market, some experts say. Read full article How Attys Can Help Dismantle The School-To-Prison Pipeline As the rise of school shootings spurs an increase in spending on school police officers, experts at a recent conference said students need more due process protections when those officers handle routine disciplinary matters: Police Monday, February 24, 2020 LAW FIRMS BakerHostetler Boies Schiller Castillo Snyder Clark Hill Cooper & Kirk Cowles & Thompson Culhane Meadows DLA Piper Dentons Epstein Becker Green Fish & Richardson Gibson Dunn Gr