All the nurses loved him. On numerous occasions when I visited him at Meridian, I would catch him telling one of his favorite and legendary courtroom stories to three or four nurses – nervous Nellies who worried they might get caught slacking, but who could not resist risking their jobs to hear a good war story from Harry.
Justice Lloyd A. Karmeier and the Illinois Supreme Court have announced the appointment of William D. Stiehl, Jr., as an At-Large Circuit Judge in the Twentieth Judicial Circuit.
Nearly two years after he was appointed to fill a vacancy created by the death of circuit judge Robert LeChien, the Illinois Supreme Court has once again picked William D. Stiehl, Jr. to fill an at-large vacancy in the Twentieth Judicial Circuit.
Marcia M. Meis, Director of the Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts, announced that the First Judicial Circuit judges voted to select Tyler R. Edmonds as associate judge of the First Judicial Circuit.
A resident physician’s undetected error may have cost a patient her life during treatment at Vanderbilt University Medical Center – just the type of case Nashville attorney Brian Cummings seeks to address.
Stress, in and of itself, is not bad. High-achieving individuals in the law profession often thrive under a modicum of pressure; however, too much of any good thing is, in fact, too much.
Belleville plaintiff attorney William D. Stiehl Jr. was appointed by the Illinois Supreme Court to fill the circuit judge vacancy left open following the death of former judge Robert LeChien roughly one year ago.
Apology laws that allow physicians to express sympathy to patients and families without it being used against them have not reduced the number of medical malpractice suits filed, or the amounts paid out, according to a new study.
A hyper-Political Correctness movement is running rampant on our public universities, with taxpayer-funded university bureaucrats and teachers trying to crush the First Amendment rights of students to openly express their faith and conservative political views.
Circuit Judge Andy Matoesian Granite City resident George Wolfe used to love his job as a building estimator. He also liked to cook, barbecue, help fix things at home and spend time with his wife, Donna, and their family in the backyard pool. That was until he suffered a stroke two years ago.