The growth of alternative legal services providers (ALSPs) has expanded the types of companies providing legal services and led to new models of business for traditional law firms, the International Trade Commission said in an April report. In recent years, ALSPs growth has even outpaced that of the traditional law firms, evidenced by their growing use by these law firms and corporations, the ITC said. Advances in information technology has allowed for the growth of ALSPs, which are categorized as legal process outsourcing firms, companies with flexible staffing services and managed services providers. In particular, the Big Four accounting firms have truly adopted the ALSPs model to most directly compete with law firms. ALSPs have also been employed by law firm as a means to deliver legal services more efficiently, the ITC said. “With increasing collaboration between law firms and ALSPs, new models of doing business in law firms are emerging, and regulations related to non-lawyer ownership of law firms in certain U.S. states are shifting,” the report said. The ITC said that more than a third of the largest U.S. law firms by revenue have partnered with or created an internal ALSP.
Although a court opinion last week cleared the way for exports of 3D-printed guns to be removed from State Department jurisdiction, the guns will continue to be covered under the agency’s U.S. Munitions List until the ruling is made official, the State Department said.
The Justice Department hasn’t yet begun prosecuting cases involving violations of the Commerce’s Department's newly issued end-user restrictions but expects that to soon become a significant part of the agency’s focus, a senior Department of Justice official said.