Pulse

  • December 08, 2025

    Quebec’s young lawyers are suffering psychological distress, report reveals

    More than 60 per cent of Quebec lawyers with fewer than 10 years of experience suffer from psychological distress, a comprehensive study reveals, painting a disconcerting portrait of young lawyers overwhelmed by stress and struggling with the pressures of billable hours and long workweeks.

  • December 08, 2025

    Lavery adds family lawyer Kassandra Roberge in Montreal

    Lavery has welcomed Kassandra Roberge to its Montreal office.

  • December 08, 2025

    The hidden mental health crisis facing Canada’s immigration lawyers

    Over the past several years, the Canadian immigration system has been transformed by political volatility, rising refusal rates, increasing automation and a level of unpredictability unprecedented in modern practice. Policies change suddenly, pathways disappear without warning, caps are imposed overnight and entire programs fluctuate depending on the priorities of whichever minister happens to be in office that year.

  • December 08, 2025

    Lawyer’s desecration of Holocaust monument highlights rise of professional-class antisemitism

    On Dec. 1, Justice Anne London-Weinstein of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice heard sentencing submissions for Iain Aspenlieder, an Ottawa municipal lawyer who vandalized Canada’s National Holocaust Monument. Her Honour said that Aspenlieder’s actions exemplify a growing and deeply unsettling reality: antisemitism in Canada is increasingly emerging not from the poor or uneducated, but from the educated and professionally empowered.

  • December 08, 2025

    From hallucination to indictment: The criminalization of the AI-enabled lie

    On Dec. 4, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice crossed a Rubicon that legal technologists and ethicists have been watching with trepidation for years. In Ko v. Li, 2025 ONSC 6785, Justice Fred Myers referred a lawyer, Jisuh Lee, to the Attorney General of Ontario for criminal contempt of court proceedings.

  • December 05, 2025

    Yves Côté appointed to National Security and Intelligence Review Agency

    Prime Minister Mark Carney has appointed Yves Côté to the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA) for a five-year term.

  • December 05, 2025

    Supreme Court rules in R. v. B.F. attempted murder case

    When someone has provided a person with the means to take their own life, and that person makes an independent and autonomous choice to do so, the question arises: how are we to distinguish between the offences of culpable homicide and aiding suicide?

  • December 05, 2025

    Mario J. Lanteigne appointed to New Brunswick Court of King’s Bench

    Mario J. Lanteigne, a sole practitioner in Bathurst, N.B., has been appointed a judge of the Court of King’s Bench of New Brunswick, Trial Division, in Bathurst.

  • December 05, 2025

    Getting called back to the bar

    I’m talking about the other bar. The salad bar. We all thought COVID-19 would signal the end of the salad bar. However, these sumptuous buffets have made a resurgence.

  • December 05, 2025

    Brutality of crime informs sentencing, appeal in B.C decision

    Criminologists might use “strain theory” to explain crimes committed by individuals who grew up in deprivation and are unable to reach their goals through legitimate means. While such individuals deserve sympathy, how far should an appellate court go in reducing sentences when the crime was brutal? That was the issue facing the Manitoba Court of Appeal in R. v. Heinrichs, 2025 MBCA 101.

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