What I’ve Learned: Random Thoughts For Young Lawyers – Above the Law

There’s
a
column
in
Esquire
titled
“What
I’ve
Learned”
where
famous
people
share
what
life
has
taught
them.  About
15
years
ago,
I
wrote
my
own
“What
I’ve
Learned”
piece
for
a
legal
publication.
Here
I
go
again.

My
first
boss
told
me,
“Don’t
make
the
client’s
problem
your
problem.”  I
think
about
that
a
lot.

Come
early to work.  Gives
you
time
to
settle
in
for
the
day.

Every
morning,
skim
your
calendar
for
the
week.  Once
a
week,
check
your
calendar
for
the
month.  

Double-check all
your
events
and
deadlines
are
properly
calendared.  The
cases
are
yours,
not
your
legal
assistant’s.

Get
the
paid
version
of
Grammarly,
even
if
you have
to
pay
for
it
yourself.

Always
use
the active voice.  Strong
nouns,
strong
verbs.  Few
adverbs
and
adjectives.  

Join
Toastmasters.  Take
an
improv
class.  Volunteer
to
speak.

Get
published.  Start
small.
Try
to
write
200-300
words every
day.
One
day, you
may
write
a
book.

Exercise.  Eat
well.  Go
to
bed
on
time.  

Join
LinkedIn.  Work
on
your
profile.  Post
regularly
on
a
topic
you
know
about
and
enjoy.

Treat
your
boss
like
your
client.

If
you
screw
up,
own it.  Develop
a
solution
and
discuss
it
with
your
supervisor
to
determine
the
best
approach
for
handling it.  Don’t
hide
your
mistake
or
try
to
cover
it
up.

Go
to
lunch
with
your
colleagues.  Don’t
always
eat
at
your
desk.

Working
from
home
is
a
privilege,
not
a
right.  The
earlier
you
are
in
your
profession,
the
more
office
time
you
need
for
your
professional
development.

Get a
hobby.

Feed
your
village
and
tribe.  We
all
need
a
team
around
us,
supporting
us,
and
we
do it
for
them.

Don’t
compromise
your
principles,
values,
or
ethics
for
the
sake
of
a
firm
or
a client.

Don’t
ever
do
anything
that
jeopardizes
your
ticket.

No
one
is
coming
to
save
you.

Your
career
is
your
responsibility.

Don’t
burn
bridges.

Pay
it
forward. Always.

Read
a
book
or
take
a
class
on
etiquette.

An
open
bar
is
not
an
invitation
to
overconsume.

Don’t overstay
your
welcome
at
an
event,
in
an
organization, or
at
a
firm.

Read.  

Don’t doom scroll.

There’s
always
another
great
show
to
watch.
Turn
off
the
television.

Listen
more.  Talk
less.

Spend
money
on
a
good
office
chair,
a
good
mattress, and
good
shoes.  Your middle-aged self
will
thank
you.

On
your
deathbed,
you
won’t
regret not
billing more
hours.

Take
an
investment
class.

Try writing poetry.

Jury
selection
is
deselection.

Get
involved.  Volunteer.  Do
pro
bono.

If
your
firm
won’t
invest
in
your
development,
it’s
on
you.




Frank
Ramos
is
a
partner
at
Goldberg
Segalla
in
Miami,
where
he
practices
commercial
litigation,
products,
and
catastrophic
personal
injury. You
can
follow
him
on LinkedIn,
where
he
has
about
80,000
followers
.

CMS’ New $50B Rural Health Fund — Is It Just Another Band-Aid? – MedCity News

With
$50
billion
set
to
flow
to
states
over
the
next
five
years,
CMS’
new

Rural
Health
Transformation
Program

represents
one
of
the
largest
federal
investments
in
rural
healthcare
in
decades.
However,
experts
believe
that
it
will
fall
short
of
addressing
the
ongoing
vulnerabilities
that
keep
rural
hospitals
and
clinics
in
such
dire
financial
circumstances. 

CMS’
new
fund
is
part
of
the

One
Big
Beautiful
Bill
Act
,
which
was
signed
into
law
in
July.
Last
month,
the
agency
announced
how
the
fund
will
work
and
invited
states
to
apply.

The
program
will
distribute
$50
billion
to
states
between
fiscal
year
2026
and
fiscal
year
2030,
with
$10
billion
released
each
year.
That
represents
roughly
a

50%
increase

in
federal
spending
on
rural
healthcare,
which
currently
totals
about

$19
billion

per
year
through
Medicaid.

To
qualify
for
funding,
states
must
submit
a
detailed
plan
outlining
how
they
intend
to
use
the
money
to
improve
rural
healthcare.
All
50
states
have
already
filed
their
intent
to
apply
for
the
funding,
with
grant
applications
due
by
November
5
and
funding
to
be
allocated
by
the
end
of
this
year.

Just
how
dire
is
the
state
of
rural
healthcare?

About
a
third

of
rural
hospitals
are
currently
at
risk
of
closure. Most
rural
providers

struggle

with
low
patient
volumes,
high
fixed
costs,
heightened
workforce
shortages
and
heavy
reliance
on
Medicaid
and
Medicare
reimbursement.


CMS
wants
to
“right-size”
the
rural
healthcare
system

CMS
Administrator
Dr.
Mehmet
Oz
framed
the
fund
as
a
“grand
experiment”
during
a
talk
last
week
at

Sanford
Health
’s

Annual
Summit
on
the
Future
of
Rural
Health
Care
.
He
said
it’s
time
to
rethink
the
rural
care
model,
prioritizing
sustainability
and
quality. 

“We
want
transformative,
big
ideas
that
will
dramatically
change
our
expectations
of
the
rural
healthcare
system,”
Dr.
Oz
declared.

CMS’
new
fund
doesn’t
seek
to
simply
pay
bills
or
patch
over
problems

rather,
the
program
aims
to
“right-size”
and
modernize
healthcare
delivery
in
rural
communities,
he
explained.

As
part
of
that
effort,
CMS
will
reevaluate
the
number
and
types
of
rural
hospitals
and
clinics
needed
in
each
region.
Dr.
Oz
also
said
that
the
agency
will
encourage
partnerships
between
large
health
systems
and
smaller
rural
facilities.
Larger
hospitals
could
help
sustain
local
providers
by
offering
services
like
telehealth
and
specialty
care.

Dr.
Oz
added
that
the
program
also
aims
to
strengthen
the
rural
workforce
through
funding
for
regional
training
programs
for
nurses
and
physicians,
as
well
as
by
potentially
expanding
the
role
of
existing
providers.
For
example,
pharmacists
could
play
a
greater
role
in
addressing
routine
issues

such
as
prescribing
medication
refills
or
diagnosing
strep
throat
via
telehealth
consultations

to
improve
patients’
access
and
reduce
their
unnecessary
travel.


Political
fix
or
structural
solution?

Even
though
Dr.
Oz
is
adamant
that
CMS’
new
fund
isn’t
designed
to
just
apply
quick
fixes,
one
healthcare
expert
said
the
project
risks
repeating
the
same

dependency
issues

created
by
temporary
Affordable
Care
Act
subsidies.

Michael
Abrams,
managing
partner
of

Numerof
&
Associates
,
warned
that
while
this
new
funding
can
help
hospitals
and
states
launch
important
initiatives,
many
of
those
programs
could
completely
fall
apart
after
this
five-year
fund
runs
out.

“An
awful
lot
of
people
in
healthcare
are
not
business
people,
so
they
don’t
understand
something
as
straightforward
as
this:
If
you
build
a
program
that
constantly
spends
more
than
it
makes,
and
it
only
gets
by
because
of
a
special
event
like
this
bailout
fund,
when
the
bailout
fund
stops,
the
program
either
finds
another
source
or
it
collapses,”
Abrams
declared.

He
called
CMS’
fund
as
a
“band-aid
solution”
driven
more
by
political
compromise
than
by
a
genuine
effort
to
solve
rural
healthcare’s
structural
problems. 

Abrams
noted
that
the
fund
was
introduced
into
the
One
Big
Beautiful
Bill
Act
as
a
gesture
for
hospitals
and
rural
lawmakers
in
light
of
the
Trump
administration’s
budget
plan

which
includes
more
than

$911
billion

in
Medicaid
cuts
that
disproportionately
hurt
rural
communities.

“If
this
bailout
fund
weren’t
needed
to
get
the
One
Big
Beautiful
Bill
[Act]
through
Congress,
this
wouldn’t
have
happened

nobody
would
give
any
thought
to
the
precarious
status
of
rural
health
care
at
all.
I
think
that’s
the
shame
of
it
all

60
million
Americans,
20%
of
our
population,
live
in
areas
that
are
designated
as
rural,”
he
remarked.

Abrams
said
these
Americans
“have
a
right
to
expect”
that
the
federal
government
would
take
a
more
thought-out
approach
to
ensuring
they
have
access
to
an
emergency
department
without
traveling
30
to
50
miles.

He
thinks
a
more
sustainable
solution
would
require
lawmakers
to
confront
the
underlying
economics
of
healthcare
in
rural
America.
This
would
involve
aligning
reimbursement
with
the
true
cost
of
care,
as
well
as
incentivizing
operational
efficiency
rather
than
perpetuating
dependence
on
temporary
federal
aid.


The
fund
helps

but
not
enough

Like
Abrams,
rural
hospitals
have
also
raised
concerns
that
CMS’
program,
while
significant,
cannot
by
itself
stabilize
rural
providers’
finances,
especially
in
the
wake
of
devastating
Medicaid
cuts.

“Without
continued
policies
that
guarantee
sustainable
reimbursement,
rural
hospitals
and
clinics
will
remain
at
risk.
This
program
is
an
important
step
forward,
but
it
must
be
paired
with
durable
reforms
that
ensure
rural
Americans
have
reliable
access
to
care
for
years
to
come,”
the

National
Rural
Health
Association
(NRHA)

said
in
a

statement

released
the
day
the
fund
was
announced.

In
an
interview
this
week,
NRHA
CEO
Alan
Morgan
emphasized
that
CMS’
rural
health
fund
and
the
Trump
administration’s
Medicaid
cuts
should
be
discussed
separately. 

He
thinks
the
fund
shouldn’t
be
dismissed
or
overlooked
simply
because
it
is
much
smaller
than
the
Trump
administration’s
Medicaid
cuts. 

“Obviously
the
Medicaid
cuts
have
to
be
repealed
going
forward.
That
just
has
to
happen.
I
think
both
sides
acknowledge
that
the
cuts
just
are
not
sustainable
for
the
rural
healthcare
system.
That
receives
so
much
of
the
attention
that
this
transformation
fund
hasn’t
received
adequate
discussion,”
Morgan
stated.


Learning
what
works

In
Morgan’s
eyes,
there
are
two
ways
the
CMS’
program
could
play
out
over
the
next
five
years.

In
the
best
case,
states
will
use
the
funds
to
build
rural
health
networks

which
consist
of
hospitals
and
clinics
collaborating
to
improve
rural
providers’
workforce
development,
data
sharing
and
AI
integration,
Morgan
explained.
In
the
worst
case,
funds
could
be
diverted
to
large
urban
providers,
leaving
rural
areas
without
support.

Morgan
stressed
the
importance
of
ensuring
that
funding
reaches
rural
communities
directly.

Even
though
the
states
will
technically
be
the
ones
submitting
the
grant
applications
to
CMS,
states
typically
rely
on
input
and
proposals
from
the
hospitals
and
health
systems
within
their
borders.
Larger,
well-resourced
health
systems

that
may
have
their
headquarters
in
urban
areas
but
also
have
a
presence
in
some
rural
communities

can
typically
write
stronger,
more
polished
grant
proposals
than
small
rural
hospitals
or
clinics.

Independent
rural
providers
usually
have
limited
administrative
capacity
and
might
struggle
to
fully
leverage
the
application,
Morgan
noted.

The
deadline
for
state
applications,
quickly
approaching
on
November
5,
is
also
a
major
challenge,
he
added.

“It’s
an
incredibly
tight
application
deadline,
and
now
you
throw
on
top
of
that
the
federal
government
is
shut
down.
That
raises
issues
and
concerns
about
how
states
are
able
to
obtain
the
answers
they
need
from
the
federal
government
about
details
on
this
application,”
Morgan
explained.

For
him,
the
success
of
the
program
hinges
on
whether
the
funds
will
truly
reach
the
rural
providers
that
need
them
most.

Overall,
Morgan
does
not
view
the
rural
health
fund
as
a
band-aid
solution.
Instead,
he
sees
it
as
a
temporary,
innovation-focused
program
that
aims
to
test
various
approaches
over
the
next
five
years.

“You’re
going
to
have
a
lot
of
innovation
hubs.
Honestly,
each
one
of
these
states
is
going
to
be
trying
new
approaches
to
sustainability
and
innovation,”
Morgan
remarked.
“Let’s
learn
from
these
next
five
years
and
then
replicate
what
works.”

Innovators
should
focus
on
initiatives
such
as
rural
residency
programs,
better
workforce
pipelines,
faster
technology
integration
and
the
introduction
of
more
alternative
payment
models,
he
said.

He
cautioned
against
over-reliance
on
technology,
saying
that
it
can
be
useful
but
is
not
a
complete
solution
to
rural
providers’
woes

and
noted
that
payment
reforms
will
always
be
the
most
important
piece
of
ensuring
the
long-term
sustainability
of
rural
hospitals.

The
program
is
far
from
a
silver
bullet,
and
rural
providers
will
still
face
challenges
once
the
five-year
funding
window
closes,
but
Morgan
said
it
has
the
potential
to
set
a
blueprint
for
making
rural
healthcare
more
resilient.


Photo:
Petri
Oeschger,
Getty
Images

Morning Docket: 10.23.25 – Above the Law

*
AI
is
speeding
up
M&A
deals
by
harnessing
the
power
of
algorithms
to
rewrite
the
same
sentence
50
times
only
to
arrive
back
at
the
same
boilerplate.
[The
Information
]

*
Reddit
sues
Perplexity
over
scraped
data
claims.
[Law360]

*
David
Lat
advises
young
Biglaw
lawyers
to
treat
it
as
a
long-term
career,
even
if
they’re
already
eyeing
the
exit.
[Bloomberg
Law
News
]

*
Law
firm
works
to
get
Halloween
costumes
for
kids
who
can’t
afford
them.
[ABA
Journal
]

*
UVA
makes
deal
with
Trump
administration.
Just
the
sort
of
coerced
compliance
with
the
federal
government
that
founder
Thomas
Jefferson
would’ve
wanted!
[Prawfsblawg]

*
Kim
Davis
thinks
Thomas
opinions
and
Barrett
book
support
her
chances
to
overturn

Obergefell

which
is
not
wrong,
but
we’re
going
to
keep
being
told

not
to
worry

anyway.
[MSNBC]

*
Michael
Wolff
sues
Melania
Trump
after
her
lawyers
threatened
to
sue
him.
[Courthouse
News
Service
]

*
In
honor
of
the
80th
anniversary
of
the
Nuremberg
trials,
the
Smithsonian
profiles
Justice
Robert
Jackson.
Catch
it
now,
before
the
administration
tells
the
Smithsonian
to
stop
focusing
on
“how
bad
Nazis
were.”
[Smithsonian]

Court rules Chimombe, Mpofu guilty as they await sentencing

HARARE

Business
partners
Moses
Mpofu
and
Mike
Chimombe
were
on
Wednesday
convicted
of
defrauding
the
agriculture
ministry
of
US$7
million
in
an
US$87
million
goat
supply
tender
using
a
non-existent
company.

The
pair,
appearing
before
Justice
Pisirayi
Kwenda,
had
entered
“not
guilty”
pleas.

They
now
await
sentencing
on
October
31.

Mpofu
denied
the
allegations
insisting
that
the
dispute
was
a
civil
matter,
and
the
state
erred
in
charging
him
in
his
personal
capacity
instead
of
their
company,
Blackdeck.


Chimombe
denied
being
involved
in
the
foiled
deal
arguing
that
he
was
only
there
to
assist
with
deliberations
as
a
member
of
a
black
empowerment
pressure
group.

Their
lawyers
insisted
that
the
two
men
had
been
targeted
in
a
complex
capture
of
the
legal
system
by
their
former
business
partner,
Wicknell
Chivayo,
who
blamed
them
for
leaking
audios
on
which
he
was
heard
stating
that
he
had
bribed
several
government
officials
to
secure
contracts
for
the
supply
of
election
materials,
including
chief
cabinet
secretary
Martin
Rushwaya,
former
Central
Intelligence
Organisation
boss
Isaac
Moyo
and
Zimbabwe
Electoral
Commission
chairperson
Justice
Priscilla
Chigumba,
among
others.

Chivayo
has
claimed
on
social
media
that
the
two
men
will
go
to
jail
for
20
years.

Kwenda
said
the
two
acted
in
common
purpose,
and
shared
the
guilt.

“A
company
is
just
a
person
in
terms
of
the
law.
It’s
really
not
a
natural
person
created
by
God.
It
being
a
fiction,
you
can’t
touch
it.
It
does
not
have
a
brain
of
its
own,
it
does
not
think
or
act
on
its
own,
so
it’s
very
difficult
to
separate
the
acts
of
a
company
from
the
acts
of
the
person
who
represents
it,”
the
judge
said.

“Mpofu
must
have
been
aware
of
his
obligation.
He
submitted
a
bid
which
contained
falsified
information,
which
confirms
that
he
was
liable.
He
should
have
called
witnesses
to
confirm
that
he
was
not
involved
in
the
submission,
but
he
did
not
do
so.”

The
judge
also
criticised
Mpofu
for
failing
to
call
witnesses
to
support
his
defence,
despite
having
promised
to
do
so
initially,
ruling
that
this
showed
that
he
had
no
defence
at
all.

“He
knew
these
witnesses
were
important
as
he
was
being
charged
in
his
personal
capacity.
His
decision
not
to
call
these
witnesses
was
his
own,
except
that
one
witness
had
died,
which
was
not
verified
by
production
of
evidence,”
the
judge
said.

“Where
a
litigant
threatens
to
call
witnesses
to
confirm
his
defence
and
later
abdicates,
the
usual
inference
is
there
was
no
intention
to
call
that
witness,
or
that
the
witness,
if
called,
would
not
confirm
that
defence.”

Kwenda
said
that
where
presumption
gives
rise
to
criminal
liability,
“the
onus
is
on
a
litigant
to
prove
that
he
did
not
play
a
part.”

Regarding
Chimombe,
the
judge
said
the
businessman
tried
to
hide
behind
a
finger
by
denying
involvement,
yet
witnesses
confirmed
that
he
would
attend
meetings.

“The
second
accused
person
strenuously
denied
he
had
much
involvement
in
this
scheme.
We
must
resolve
that
factual
dispute,
and
that
can
be
rectified
by
reference
to
the
testimony
of
witnesses,”
Kwenda
said.

“The
witnesses,
John
Bhasera
(agriculture
ministry
secretary)
and
Nhundurwa,
said
they
would
attend
meetings
together.
We
therefore
found
that
he
participated.
We
did
not
find
his
explanation
convincing.
If
he
said
he
attended
meetings
with
Nhundurwa,
that
would
have
nothing
to
do
with
lobbying
for
an
award
for
Blackdeck
because
it
had
already
been
awarded.”

Kwenda
rejected
the
claim
that
Chimombe
attended
meetings
merely
to
resolve
disputes
as
a
member
of
the
Economic
Empowerment
Group
(EEG).

Queried
the
judge:
“There
was
clearly
another
reason
for
this.
Why
would
he
be
there
to
attend
a
business
meeting?
It
shows
he
had
a
mandate.”

Kwenda
concluded
the
two
were
main
players
and
found
them
both
guilty
of
the
allegations.

Mpofu’s
lawyer
Ashiel
Mugiya
said
they
respect
the
judgement,
“but
we
are
not
happy
with
it.”

He
told
reporters
outside
court:
“We
will
appeal
at
the
Supreme
Court
after
sentencing
and
we
believe
we
have
a
number
of
good
grounds
for
appeal.”

Mugiya
was
instructing
Professor
Lovemore
Madhuku.

Tapson
Dzvetero
represented
Mpofu.

The
National
Prosecuting
Authority
argued
during
the
trial
that
the
two
men,
through
a
company
called
Blackdeck
Private
Limited,
responded
to
a
September
2021
call
by
the
ministry
of
lands
and
agriculture
inviting
bids
for
the
supply
of
632,001
goats
under
a
scheme
worth
US$87,757,16.

The
goats
would
be
distributed
nationally,
with
beneficiaries
passing
on
the
animals
to
the
next
needy
household
after
kidding.

Prosecutors
say
after
winning
the
tender,
it
was
Blackdeck
Livestock
and
Poultry
Farming,
an
unregistered
company,
which
signed
documents
with
the
ministry.

Mpofu
represented
the
company
and
Chimombe
acted
as
a
witness.

On
further
review
of
Blackdeck
Private
Limited’s
documents,
it
is
alleged
that
the
company
had
no
valid
tax
clearance
certificate
from
the
Zimbabwe
Revenue
Authority
for
2021,
and
that
a
QR
code
attached
to
the
National
Social
Security
compliance
certificate
belonged
to
a
different
company
called
Skywalk
Investments.

Both
documents
were
required
for
one
to
be
eligible
to
bid
for
the
tender.

Acting
on
the
misrepresentations,
prosecutors
say
the
ministry
went
on
to
pay
30
percent
of
the
contract
in
the
local
currency,
an
amount
of
ZWL1.6
billion
which
was
allegedly
equivalent
to
US$7,712,197
in
two
instalments
on
April
21,
2022,
and
June
29,
2022.

Following
delays
in
delivering
the
goats,
the
ministry
engaged
Blackdeck
and
was
informed
that
the
company
had
mobilised
32,500
goats
across
the
provinces
which
were
ready
to
be
distributed
to
the
final
beneficiaries.

A
verification
process
by
the
ministry
at
various
sites,
it
is
alleged,
however
showed
that
the
company
only
had
3,713
goats.

“After
the
ministry
of
lands
realised
that
they
were
being
deceived
by
the
accused
persons
they
then
cancelled
the
contract
on
August
29,
2022,”
charged
the
NPA.

To
date,
the
prosecution
says
4,208
goats
worth
US$331,445.25
have
been
delivered
and
the
ministry
was
prejudiced
of
US$7,380,751.85.

Mpofu
also
argued
that
the
money,
paid
in
a
very
unstable
local
currency
at
the
time,
depreciated
before
it
could
be
used
for
buying
goats.
At
the
time
of
their
arrest,
the
two
men
said
the
contract
was
still
running,
and
the
ministry
had
not
declared
a
breach.
In
fact,
they
were
seeking
to
renegotiate
it
due
to
currency
losses.

Threats To Call ICE Puts Chill On In-House Attorney’s Career – See Also – Above the Law

Two
Losses
Don’t
Make
A
Right:
Former
associate
general
counsel
loses
the
game
and
her
job
over
a
Dodger’s
win.
There
Goes
Your
Nomination!:
Paul
Ingrassia’s
nomination
gets
pulled
after
self-professed
Nazi
streak
went
public.
Violence
From
The
No
Kings
Protest
Came
From
The
Cops:
Even
with
an
injunction
telling
them
they
couldn’t
shoot
journalists.
This
Partnership
Can
Help
You
Find
What
You’re
Looking
For:
Check
out
Thomson
Reuters’s
partnership
with
DeepJudge!
On
This
Week’s
Episode
Of
Thinking
Like
A
Lawyer:
Things
to
NOT
call
a
judge,
FASORP
losses,
and
Baudrillardian
analysis.

The Real And Fictional Connections To A Top Law School – Above the Law



Ed.
Note:

Welcome
to
our
daily
feature

Trivia
Question
of
the
Day!


Téa
Leoni’s
character
in
the
CBS
television
show

Madam
Secretary

is
a
law
school
graduate
of
which
T14
law
school?


Hint:
In
real
life,
Leoni’s
father,
Anthony
Pantaleoni,
was
an
alumnus
of
the
same
law
school
(and
was
a
partner
at
Biglaw
firm
Norton
Rose
Fulbright).



See
the
answer
on
the
next
page.

Burning $200M To Kill 5 Ukrainian Civilians: A Snapshot Of The Doomed Economics Of Russia’s Invasion – Above the Law

With

a
brittle
ceasefire

in
the
Middle
East,
President
Donald
Trump
secured
the
headlines
he
wanted,
and
he
has
now
set
his
sights
on
Ukraine.
Meeting
with
Ukrainian
President
Volodymyr
Zelensky

in
the
White
House
on
October
17

to
discuss
the
possibility
of
further
cooperation
between
the
United
States
and
Ukraine,
Trump
had
previously
indicated
a
potential
willingness
to
send
Ukraine
Tomahawk
missiles
to
allow
for
strikes
deep
within
Russia’s
home
territory.
Ultimately,
the
U.S.
president

declined
to
supply
Tomahawks

to
Ukraine,
at
least
for
now.

Trump
has
seemingly
switched
loyalties
several
times
during
the
course
of
this
war,
and
just
prior
to
his
meeting
with
Zelensky
took
a
phone
call,
and
arranged
a
future
in-person
meeting,
with
Russia’s
leader
Vladimir
Putin.
Since
Trump
took
office
in
January,

Putin
has
masterfully
evaded
further
U.S.
sanctions

and
placed
in
doubt
America’s
previously
unwavering
support
for
Ukraine
through
a
determined
campaign
of
personal
flattery
and
dangling
hypothetical
business
deals
in
front
of
the
American
president.

U.S.
support
has
been
key
to
the
Ukrainian
war
effort.
Still,
Trump
is
the
definition
of
an
unreliable
ally.
In
just
the
latest
example
of
this,
it
took
less
than
a
month
for

Trump
to
go
from
saying

Kyiv
can
“win
all
of
Ukraine
back
in
its
original
form”
and
get
back
“the
original
borders
from
where
this
war
started,”

to
saying
,
“Let
[Ukraine]
be
cut
the
way
it
is.
It’s
cut
up
right
now.
I
think
78%
of
the
land
is
already
taken
by
Russia.
You
leave
it
the
way
it
is
right
now.”

Unfortunately,
such
contradictory
nonsense
matters
when
the
79-year-old
dotard
uttering
it
is
the
president
of
the
United
States.
But
peace
will
not
be
had
based
on
territorial
concessions
to
Russia.
As
long
as
Putin
is
in
charge,
a
Russia
in
possession
of
seized
territory
will
always
be
the
proverbial
mouse
given
a
cookie.

If
Trump
wanted
a
real,
lasting
peace
in
Ukraine,
he’d
be
better
served
to
let
the
disastrous
economics
of
how
Russia
is
conducting
this
war
run
their
course.
While
Russia’s
economy
has
proven
surprisingly
resilient
to
international
sanctions,
Moscow
has

reported
a
budget
deficit
of
$51
billion

for
the
first
eight
months
of
this
year,
and
its
own
central
bank
has
issued
warnings
over
depleted
production,
labor,
and
financial
reserves.
With
Russia’s
economy
now
almost
wholly
reliant
on
discounted
long-term
energy
sales
to
India
and
China,
the
Kremlin
is
proposing
significant
defense
budget
cuts.

Russia’s
misuse
of
its
military
resources
was
on
full
display

during
its
recent
bombardment

of
Lviv.
Five
people
were
killed

four
of
these
innocent
victims
were
a
whole
family
whose
house
was
flattened

with
terrorism
being
the
only
apparent
purpose
of
the
attack.
Yet,
the
people
of
Lviv
were
not
at
all
terrorized.
The
bombing
took
place
early
in
the
morning
on
a
Sunday.
By
that
afternoon,
there
were
more
people
sitting
out
convivially
on
the
sidewalk
patios
of
Lviv’s
numerous
cafes
and
bars
than
there
had
been
the
previous
day.
That
night,
an
impromptu
street
dance
sprang
up
in
a
historic
Old
Town
square.
Nobody
was
cowed.

Russia
spent
at
least
$200
million
to
accomplish
nothing
beyond
murdering
five
noncombatants.

According
to
the
governor

of
the
Lviv
region,
Maksym
Kozytskyi,
the
Russians
struck
Lviv
with
140
Shahed
kamikaze
drones
and
about
two
dozen
cruise
missiles.
Earlier
versions
of
the
Shahed
drones
imported
by
Russia
were
significantly
more
expensive,
but
now
that
Russia
is

increasingly
producing
them

domestically,
costs
have
fallen
to
an
estimated
$70,000
per
unit.
That’s
still
almost
$10
million
worth
of
drones
alone.

Ten
million
dollars
spent
on
drones
is
a
pittance
compared
to
the
cost
of
the
cruise
missiles.
Although
Ukrainian
authorities
did
not
delineate
the
exact
number
of
each
type
of
missile
that
was
fired
into
Lviv,
we
do
know
some
of
them
were
Kalibr
cruise
missiles
launched
from
the
Black
Sea
(cost:
$6.5
million
apiece
),
at
least
one
was

a
Kh-101
cruise
missile

($13
million)
and
some
were
Kinzhal
air-launched
ballistic
missiles
(with
a
whopping
sticker
price
of
$15
million
per
unit).
Even
if
you
assume
that
the
majority
of
the
missiles
were
of
the
cheapest
variety,
Russia
was
well
past
$200
million
spent
on
military
hardware
alone
in
this
bombing,
to
say
nothing
of
all
the
other
costs
like
fuel
and
personnel.

Russia
is
indeed
occupying
some
Ukrainian
territory
(though
nowhere
near
78%
of
it

possibly
Trump
was
thinking
only
of
the
Donbas
region
with
that
figure).
The
tactics
Russia
now
must
resort
to
are
unlikely
to
win
it
any
more
large
territorial
gains.
Literally
burning
$200
million
worth
of
weaponry
over
the
skies
of
Lviv
to
demoralize
no
one
bleeds
Russia’s
struggling
wartime
economy,
and
these
are
the
types
of
attacks
Russia
now
routinely
launches.

Trump
cannot
secure
a
real
peace
in
Ukraine
by
offering
Ukrainian
land
to
Russia.
What
he
could
do
to
end
the
war
is
hasten
the
economic
ruin
that
Russia
has
brought
upon
itself
with
this
invasion.
Russia
cannot
sustain
the
level
of
waste
it
is
engaging
in
indefinitely.
When
the
Russian
economy
finally
breaks,
it
will
be
forced
to
withdraw
its
forces,
for
good.




Jonathan
Wolf
is
a
civil
litigator
and
author
of 
Your
Debt-Free
JD
 (affiliate
link).
He
has
taught
legal
writing,
written
for
a
wide
variety
of
publications,
and
made
it
both
his
business
and
his
pleasure
to
be
financially
and
scientifically
literate.
Any
views
he
expresses
are
probably
pure
gold,
but
are
nonetheless
solely
his
own
and
should
not
be
attributed
to
any
organization
with
which
he
is
affiliated.
He
wouldn’t
want
to
share
the
credit
anyway.
He
can
be
reached
at 
[email protected].

Will NetDocuments’ ‘We’re Not A Rock Band’ Approach To Legal AI Sustain It? – Above the Law

Image
courtesy
of
NetDocuments.

In
the
season
of
seemingly
never-ending
user
conferences,
the

NetDocuments
Inspire

conference
took
place
this
week
in
Scottsdale,
Arizona.

NetDocuments

is
one
of
the
leading
document
management
service
providers
and
is
finding
its
way
in
the
AI
landscape.
I
came
to
its
conference
frankly
wondering
whether
its
laser
product
focus
and
credibility
could
sustain
it
long
term
in
the
era
of
consolidation
of
functions
and
offerings.
I
still
don’t
know
the
answer.


The
Opening
Keynote

The
opening
keynote
was
primarily
given
by

Josh
Baxter
,
NetDocuments
CEO,
along
with

Dan
Hauck
,
its
Chief
Product
Officer.

In
the
era
of
bombastic,
over-the-top
keynotes
by
C-suite
legal
tech
bros
leaping
about
the
stage,
Baxter’s
approach
was
refreshing.
He
was
understated
and
spoke
in
a
calm,
credible
voice.
As
Baxter
put
it
when
I
met
with
him
separately,
“We’re
not
a
rock
band.”

Baxter
reflects
the
company
well.
NetDocuments
has
always
quietly
delivered
a
workman-like
document
management
system.
It
doesn’t
overpromise,
and
it
usually
overdelivers.
I
think
that’s
why
it
is
used
by
so
many
law
firms.
Its
team
can
walk
into
a
room
of
skeptical
lawyers
and
let
the
products
sell
themselves.
Too
often,
legal
tech
vendors
forget
that
at
the
end
of
the
day,
they
are
selling
to
lawyers
who
are
trained
to
be
skeptical
and
can
spot
bullshit
a
mile
away.


An
Apology

Baxter’s
opening
remarks
reflected
this
approach
and
the
company’s
attitude.
He
didn’t
start
by
touting
NetDocuments
successes;
he
started
by
taking
responsibility
for
an
outage
last
week
that
affected
NetDocuments
customers.
You
have
to
understand
how
that
played.
Baxter
was
talking
to
a
room
full
of
mostly
IT
people.
He
understood
that
when
systems
from
outside
vendors
fail,
angry
lawyers
who
know
little
about
technical
issues
flood
IT
personnel
with
demands
to
get
it
up
and
running
immediately.
Who
gets
the
blame
and
takes
the
beating?
The
IT
folks.
I
talked
to
some
of
them
afterwards
about
the
outage
who
confirmed
that
was
exactly
how
it
played
out.

Baxter
put
that
event
up
front
and
didn’t
sugarcoat
it.


The
Announcement
of
AI
Profile

The
product
announcement
portion
of
the
keynote
primarily
focused
on
a
new
tool
called
AI
Profile.
AI
Profile
is
designed
to
run
in
the
background
(it’s
no
coincidence
that
many
of
NetDocuments
tools
run
in
the
background
doing
nuts-and-bolts
work
day
after
day
that
the
user
rarely
notices).
It’s
designed
to
use
metadata
to
automatically
profile
the
critical
information
about
a
document,
so
that
users
can
drill
down
and
get
the
information
they
need.
This
enables
users
to
precisely
search
for
and
find
particular
documents
on
particular
issues.

Ahh
metadata,
I
haven’t
heard
that
term
much
lately.
The
problem
with
metadata
has
always
been
that
inputting
good
metadata
into
any
system
takes
time.
Lawyers
and
legal
professionals
aren’t
and
won’t
spend
the
time
to
input
critical
metadata
about
documents.

When
they
are
done
working
with
a
document,
they’re
done.
And
it
shouldn’t
be
surprising
that
this
is
the
case:
most
NetDocuments
customers
bill
by
the
hour.
Inputting
metadata
isn’t
billable.
 

The
second
problem?
Lawyers
by
nature
are
independent.
Which
means
10
lawyers
can
produce
the
same
document
and
call
it
10
different
things.
And
they
are
all
convinced
they
are
right. 

And
as
one
of
the
placards
outside
the
session
rooms
put
it,
“Lawyers
didn’t
go
to
law
school
to
fill
out
metadata
fields.”

But
it’s
metadata
that
reveal
the
guts
of
a
document:
its
type,
its
unique
characteristics,
and
what
it
does.
So,
it’s
valuable
and
NetDocuments
seems
to
have
found
a
way
to
automate
its
collection.


How
Does
It
Work
and
What
Does
It
Do?

NetDocuments
has
created
a
prebuilt
taxonomy
and
document
attributes
to
profile
various
documents
based
on
working
with
experts
in
legal
taxonomy
and
data
extraction.
(The
taxonomy
can
also
be
customized
to
meet
particular
firm
needs.)
AI
Profile
will
look
at
a
document
and
fill
in
the
information
about
it
based
on
the
prebuilt
profile.
This
can
be
done
quickly
across
millions
of
documents.

Hauck
gave
an
example
of
the
preparation
of
a
cell
phone
tower
lease
agreement
in
Arizona.
With
profiling,
I
can
access
all
the
leases
for
cell
phone
towers
in
Arizona
the
firm
has
done
and
then
access
the
key
unique
clauses.

And
by
having
AI
tools
run
on
profiled
documents,
you
reduce
response
inaccuracies.

In
short,
according
to
Hauck,
“metadata
dramatically
improves
the
search
capabilities
of
AI.
We
are
doing
things
with
semantic
search
and
AI
search
to
be
able
to
carve
out
results
that
are
profoundly
impactful.”
It
overlays
“foundational
GenAI
capabilities
into
NetDocuments.”


But
Isn’t
This
Old
School?

But
Hauck
posed
the
question
that
was
running
through
my
mind,
especially
after
attending
some
recent
user
conferences:
“Isn’t
this
old
school?
Aren’t
there
amazing
tools
that
already
can
handle
unstructured
data?”

Hauck
says,
no,
there
aren’t
a
lot
of
tools
that
can
do
that,
at
least
quickly.
With
AI
Profile,
“You
can
formulate
a
generic
search
and
then
use
complex
metadata
to
look
for
something
specific
like
a
certain
kind
of
agreement
of
a
certain
deal
value.”
You
can
do
things
like
determining
how
many
times
a
lawyer
has
done
a
certain
task,
which
is
valuable
for
things
like
RFPs
and
bringing
the
right
expertise
to
the
table.
Without
profiling,
Hauck
says
AI
tools
can’t
do
that
accurately
and
quickly.

Using
the
filtered
metadata
is
also
important
for
security:
it
would
enable
users
to
find
and
ensure
the
protection
of
documents
containing,
say,
personally
identifiable
information
or
personal
health
records
and
place
those
documents
in
secure
folders.


NetDocuments’
Future

I
don’t
know
if
AI
Profile
will
do
what
Baxter
and
Hauck
say
it
will.
I
don’t
know
if
other
companies
that
offer
AI
tools
that
work
on
internal
and
external
data
can
intrude
on
the
document
management
space
and
take
over
that
function.
I
don’t
know
if
someday
NetDocuments
will
be
acquired
by
a
company
that
offers
AI
tools
for
external
data
to
catch
up
with
competition.
Or
if
NetDocuments
might
become
the
acquirer.

But
what
I
can
tell
you
is
that
tech
companies
that
are
laser
focused
on
one
thing
typically
do
it
well
because
of
that
focus.
NetDocuments
isn’t
trying
to
take
over
the
legal
tech
world.
As
Baxter
put
it,
“We’re
not
going
to
deliver
every
capability
from
the
business
of
law
to
the
practice
of
law.”

What
it
is
doing
is
trying
to
solve
frustration
points
in
document
retention
and
management.
It’s
trying
to
help
lawyers
and
legal
professionals
use
their
documents
and
internal
content
in
new
and
valuable
ways.
Hauck
told
me
NetDocuments
wants
“to
give
them
the
ability
to
access
content
at
the
right
moment
in
the
right
way.
With
AI
capabilities
that
are
built
into
the
experience,”
instead
of
being
the
experience
like
others
seem
to
want
to
do.
Baxter
added,
“We
believe
there
is
still
this
world
where
meeting
users
where
they
are
is
valuable.”

So,
I
can’t
answer
whether
NetDocuments
can
remain
a
player
by
offering
a
document
management
product,
as
comprehensive
as
it
is,
especially
when
we
may
be
approaching
the
era
of
tech
Walmarts.
But
its
credibility
and
history
of
offering
good
products
makes
it
a
valued
and
trusted
partner
to
many
law
firms.

And
that
fact
alone
may
sustain
it
for
the
time
being,
even
as
other
vendors
promise
products
that
can
do
more
across
various
disciplines.




Stephen
Embry
is
a
lawyer,
speaker,
blogger,
and
writer.
He
publishes TechLaw
Crossroads
,
a
blog
devoted
to
the
examination
of
the
tension
between
technology,
the
law,
and
the
practice
of
law
.

Government Chaos Means Record Revenues For Biglaw Lobbying Practices – Above the Law

(Photo
by
Win
McNamee/Getty
Images)



Ed.
note
:
Welcome
to
our
daily
feature,

Quote
of
the
Day
.


I
don’t
expect
the
chaotic
pace
will
slow
down
for
the
remainder
of
the
year.





Loren
Monroe,
a
principal
at
BGR
Group,
in
comments
given
to

Reuters
,
on
the
record
revenue
top
D.C.
lobbying
firms
took
in
during
2025’s
third
quarter,
just
before
the
federal
government
shutdown.
BGR
Group
said
it
earned
$19.1
million,
while
several
Biglaw
firms

Akin
Gump,
Brownstein
Hyatt
Farber
Schreck,
and
Holland
&
Knight

also
reported
their
best
quarters
ever,
with
earning
tens
of
millions
of
dollars
in
federal
lobbying
revenue.





Staci
Zaretsky
 is
the
managing
editor
of
Above
the
Law,
where
she’s
worked
since
2011.
She’d
love
to
hear
from
you,
so
please
feel
free
to

email

her
with
any
tips,
questions,
comments,
or
critiques.
You
can
follow
her
on BlueskyX/Twitter,
and Threads, or
connect
with
her
on LinkedIn.

Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt to Begin Lithium Sulphate Production in 2026


22.10.2025


20:20

Zhejiang
Huayou
Cobalt
has
been
producing
lithium
concentrate
at
Arcadia
Mine
since
July
2023.

Nicholas
Nhede

Chinese
mining
company
Zhejiang
Huayou
Cobalt is
set
to
begin
 producing
lithium
sulphate
at
its
new
$400
million
processing
facility
at
the
Arcadia
Mine
in
Zimbabwe
from
Q1
2026.

The
development
supports
Zimbabwe’s
local
beneficiation
strategy
aimed
at
increasing
investments
in
local
mineral
processing
to
industrialize
the
country
and
create
employment.
Zimbabwe plans
to
 ban
the
export
of
lithium
concentrate
by
2027,
as
part
of
the
strategy.

“The
quantity
of
the
lithium
sulphate
should
be
more
than
60,000
metric
tons,
but
it
will
depend
on
the
configuration
of
the
plant,
because
it
is
brand
new,” stated
Henry
Zhu,
General
Manager,
Prospect
Lithium
Zimbabwe

a
subsidiary
of
Zhejiang
Huayou
Cobalt.

Zhejiang
Huayou
Cobalt
has
been
producing lithium
concentrate
 at
Arcadia
Mine
since
July
2023.
The
company
exported
400,000
tons
of
lithium
concentrate
from
Zimbabwe
in
2024.

Source:


Zimbabwe:
Zhejiang
Huayou
Cobalt
to
Begin
Lithium
Sulphate
Production
in
2026

Post
published
in:

Business