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McBrayer Blogs

Showing 6 posts from 2026.

Legal Ethics Case Study: The Fen-Phen Settlement Fraud Caught in a Legal Web

Posted In Legal Ethics

Legal ethics rules and opinions don’t exist in a vacuum. They are good-faith attempts to provide practical guardrails for the complex and ever-changing behemoth that is the practice of law, and they have plenty of flexibility. Once those lines truly begin to blur, however, the situation can rapidly escalate as your career loses its footing. Depending on which way you trip, you may find yourself ensnared in more than one net. More >

Attorneys: AI Impact on Ethics Obligations Begins at Intake

Lawyers have an ethical duty to understand how AI usage not only implicates their own practice of law, but also how AI impacts the attorney-client relationship. Clients use AI to summarize emails, draft outlines, brainstorm arguments, and attempt to address situations before ever calling a lawyer. That behavior has created a new intake risk before a client matter even begins. Increasingly, the first intake questions are no longer just “When did this happen?” or “Was that agreement in writing?”  Intake questions must also include “Did you ask AI about this?” More >

Economic Development Is Increasingly About Execution

What causes some economic development projects to move forward smoothly while others lose momentum long before construction ever begins?


That question surfaced repeatedly across recent industry conversations, including discussions at the 2026 KAED Collaboration Conference.

The focus was less on headline projects themselves and more on the realities that determine whether projects stay aligned once timelines tighten, infrastructure questions emerge, and multiple stakeholders are working toward the same outcome.

None of those pressures are entirely new on their own. What feels different is how often they are overlapping at the same time and how directly communities are being forced to think about readiness, coordination, and long term sustainability in practical terms.

The challenge for many communities is no longer identifying opportunity. It is sustaining alignment long enough to execute successfully.

Increasingly, economic development work is becoming less about any single project and more about managing overlapping pressures at the same time: infrastructure, workforce, funding, permitting, redevelopment, and long term sustainability. More >

Planning and Zoning: When Public Opinion Shapes Project Outcomes

Approval Is Not the Finish Line

For many development projects, the technical hurdles are clear.

  • Zoning can be amended.
  • Permits can be secured.
  • Infrastructure can be engineered.

But projects rarely succeed or fail on technical readiness alone. They succeed or struggle based on whether they earn enough public comfort to move forward. More >

Economic Development: From Approval to Impact 

Approval is Only the Beginning  

Approval is often seen as the defining milestone in an economic development project, but approval alone does not define success. The more meaningful question is whether a project ultimately delivers what stakeholders actually need.  

For developers, this may mean predictability, speed, and cost-effectiveness. For municipalities, it may be job creation, tax base growth, and infrastructure alignment. For the broader community, success might mean public confidence that this growth supports local priorities.  

Every project carries layered goals.  Without structure, those goals may remain informal and unmet.   More >

The Real Risk in Lease Enforcement

5 Things Property Owners Should Watch and When to Get Legal Involved

Lease enforcement today operates within tighter statutory requirements, increased fair housing scrutiny, and evolving federal rules. There is less room for error. 

For property owners and developers, that means lease enforcement is no longer just a management function. It is a legal one. The risk is not only whether a tenant breached the lease, but whether each step taken in response will hold up. 

That is where bringing in legal assistance earlier can make a real difference.  More >

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