8 News Now
National Review
Las Vegas Review-Journal
Ralston Reports
Campbell & Williams successfully represents local media journalist, Dana Gentry, in Nevada news shield statute case.
For the better part of 20 years, Campbell & Williams’ senior partners, Don Campbell and Colby Williams, have been tasked with managing some of the most complex and difficult legal issues for many of Nevada’s most powerful individuals and companies.
Ralston Reports
Colby Williams appears alongside Judge Glass on Ralston Reports, discussing the topic of juror privacy following the Zimmerman trial.
ESPN
Remember that marijuana joint that cost Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. $900,000? The price has been reduced to $100,000. While Chavez was willing to serve the suspension, he and his team viewed the fine as excessive and his lawyers, Don Campbell and Colby Williams, were preparing a lawsuit against the commission over the size of the fine, believing that it violated the United States constitution's eighth amendment, which bars excessive fines. They had been in negotiations with the commission to reduce the amount of the fine, which the commission was willing to do, especially after a May 11 decision by the World Anti-Doping Agency to revise its policy on marijuana use which increased the threshold for what constitutes a positive test. Under the new rules, Chavez would not have tested positive.
Yahoo! Sports
The Nevada State Athletic Commission unanimously agreed to a settlement with Chavez Jr. that was worked out between Chavez attorneys Don Campbell and Colby Williams and Nevada deputy attorney general Vivienne Rakowsky.
The Daily Beast
Sheldon Adelson went to great lengths this week to keep cameras out of the courtroom, even hiring Harvard University law professor Alan Dershowitz to argue his case, but the American casino star’s desperate anti-camera measure—which he claimed was for safety reasons—was an undeniable flop. Although Judge Bare didn’t publicly comment on whether Adelson’s security concerns had merit, he took the unusual step of forgoing a ruling from the bench in favor of requesting that Donald Campbell, the prevailing attorney for the media outlets, read some of his commentary: “What better way to demonstrate to the public that its courts are fair and just than to say to the public, ‘Come and view the proceedings yourself and judge for yourself,’” Campbell said.
Las Vegas City Life
Few people were allowed to see the epic confrontation of legal titans that played out over the past few days in a local courtroom, but it was every bit as tense and exciting as any fictional drama. On one side was legendary Harvard Law professor Alan Dershowitz. On the other side was a local legal titan who’s likewise championed media freedom and has defended many of the best-known Nevada scribes (including Knappster). Former federal prosecutor Don Campbell was hired by the Review-Journal for what might seem a counterintuitive assignment: to defend the right of the RJ’s competitors — namely KLAS Channel 8 and KTNV Channel 13 — to have a camera in the courtroom to record the proceedings, including any testimony by billionaire Sheldon Adelson.
The Las Vegas Review Journal
Adelson Asks to Bar Cameras From Court Because of "Security Threat"
The Las Vegas Review Journal
"Legalizing Pot Makes $900,000 Sense"
ABA Journal
Apparently seeking to disprove a public claim by billionaire Sheldon Adelson that he had lost his temper in a 2006 state court deposition, a Las Vegas attorney last year filed, in a subsequent federal wage-and-hour case, a video of the session.
The Daily Beast
Casino mogul Sheldon Adelson is on the rampage again, suing a Wall Street Journal reporter for libel. John L. Smith has been there, and it nearly cost him everything.
Las Vegas Sun
Don Campbell, a former federal prosecutor and one of the best lawyers in town, did give me a useful piece of advice: Go with judges who have some experience as litigators, meaning they’ve tried cases in front of judges and juries.
Las Vegas Review-Journal
Kazuo Okada encountered another setback in his legal battle with Wynn Resorts Ltd., losing a bid to vote his former shares at the Nov. 2 annual meeting.
Las Vegas Review-Journal
Bishop Gorman High School hiring lawyer extraordinaire Don Campbell to do battle with the Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association is like ... what?
Mountain States Super Lawyers 2008
It was a risk so large that Don Campbell now marvels at the confidence with which he took it. The fate of Nevada's governorship hung in the balance. Campbell had to make the decision that would either save Republican Rep. Jim Gibbons' gubernatorial campaign or, quite possibly, send him to jail.
The Ultimate Fighting Championship
Zuffa, LLC, dba the Ultimate Fighting Championship® ("UFC®), today announced that it served a demand for retraction upon the parent entities and executives of the website CagePotato regarding certain false and defamatory statements attributed to UFC® President, Dana White, in an April 14th website posting.
Las Vegas Review-Journal
It turns out I know a few of the characters in the malodorous melodrama swirling around local television news producer Dana Gentry, who isn't being sued but nevertheless finds herself accused of ethical impropriety in connection with her reports on the upheaval at Aspen Financial Services. Gentry, the executive producer for "Face to Face With Jon Ralston," is accused of biased reporting and too-cozy relationships with Aspen investors who are suing its principal owner, Jeff Guinn, son of former Gov. Kenny Guinn.