We havenât missed a beat since Kimmitt left: Minters
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MinterEllisonâs acting CEO Virginia Briggs has rejected talk the firm is imploding after the exit of Annette Kimmitt, saying it has been âbusiness as usualâ at Australiaâs largest law firm.
Ms Briggs also said the exit of seven partners in recent months was âjust a cycle of law firm lifeâ and that Minters âgot caught up a bit in a bigger and more seismic storyâ.
MinterEllisonâs acting CEO Virginia Briggs: âOur clients donât want to hear about us, or talk about us.âÂ
Louise Kennerley
MinterEllison loses M&A partner to Squire Patton Boggs
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MinterEllison M&A partner Michael Gajic has left the building.
Arsineh Houspian
It is understood after almost 10 years at Minters, Michael Gajic has decided to take on a new role at global law firm Squire Patton Boggs.
Squire has a small – but growing – presence in Australia, with offices in Darwin, Perth and Sydney, and part of Gajic’s remit will be to help drive the growth of its local public M&A practice.
It’s another high-profile loss for Minters, which saw three of its PE partners – Ricky Casali, Glen Sauer and Chris Allen – resign en masse a few months ago, alongside finance partners John Mosley and Stewart Robinson.
Man charged with beating Detroit nursing home resident headed to trial
Suspect pleads not guilty to charges
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DETROIT – Jayden Hayden, 20, came before a judge on Monday in the case of the May 15 brutal beating of 75-year-old Norman Bledsoe at Westwood Nursing Center.
“He came to the facility because of COVID. They opened a COVID unit so that’s how Mr. Bledsoe was introduced into the nursing home,” said nurse, Joely Pointer while explaining why the two were placed in the same room together.
Nursing home worker, Stewart Robinson, was the first one to enter room 205 where the assault took place after hearing the commotion. Robinson says Hayden tried to make the whole thing look like an accident.