Law.com is the flagship publication of ALM Media -- a legal industry publishing conglomerate that also owns The American Lawyer, National Law Journal, Legal Intelligencer, and dozens of regional legal publications. For attorneys dealing with coverage from ALM's legal wire service, see our companion guide on removing a Law360 article. For attorneys, paralegals, and legal professionals, an article in Law.com or its affiliated publications can directly affect client acquisition, bar standing, and professional partnerships. The good news: ALM Media operates with specific editorial policies that create clear paths for correction and removal requests.
Law.com is part of ALM Media -- corrections and removals go through ALM's editorial standards process, not just the individual publication where the article appeared.
Bar disciplinary actions, legal malpractice coverage, and case outcomes are the most common scenarios -- and some of the most responsive when outcomes have changed.
ALM has relationships with the legal community that create reputational incentives for accuracy -- they respond to documented errors more reliably than general consumer press.
Court outcomes, case dismissals, and settlement agreements can justify correction or removal requests on factual grounds -- especially when the original article covered the earlier, adverse stage of proceedings.
ALM Media is not just Law.com -- it is a legal industry publishing empire that owns and operates most of the major legal trade publications in the United States. Understanding its portfolio is essential because editorial decisions at one ALM publication often affect coverage across the network, and your removal or correction request may need to address multiple publications simultaneously.
ALM's major publications include: Law.com (flagship digital platform), The American Lawyer (biglaw and elite firm coverage), National Law Journal (national legal news), Legal Intelligencer (Pennsylvania), New York Law Journal, Corporate Counsel, Law.com International, and regional publications covering virtually every major legal market. ALM also owns legal newswire services that feed content to its network.
Coverage focuses on biglaw firm moves, court outcomes, regulatory actions, bar discipline proceedings, lateral hires, firm dissolutions, and individual attorney news. Because ALM serves a sophisticated professional audience -- judges, partners, general counsels, law firm administrators -- accuracy is a professional standard, not just a policy. The SPJ Code of Ethics that governs responsible journalism supports correction of factual errors across all credible publications. Errors in ALM coverage are professionally embarrassing to the publication in a way that errors in general consumer press are not.
In our experience working with attorneys and legal professionals on Law.com removal requests, the following categories appear most frequently and have the most defined paths:
Bar disciplinary proceedings. State bar actions -- suspension, reprimand, temporary suspension, disbarment proceedings -- are covered aggressively by ALM publications. These articles rank highly in search results for the attorney's name and remain indexed indefinitely, affecting client development and professional reputation long after the matter is resolved.
Malpractice verdicts and settlements. Civil litigation outcomes against attorneys are public record and are reported with significant detail by ALM publications. Attorneys who prevail on appeal, reach confidential settlements, or whose matters are otherwise resolved often have grounds for update requests.
Lateral move coverage with inaccuracies. ALM tracks attorney lateral moves extensively. When coverage of a lateral move contains errors -- wrong practice area, wrong year, wrong firm destination, misstated terms -- correction requests are appropriate and often successful.
Firm dissolution and layoff coverage. Attorneys caught in mass layoffs or firm dissolution events covered by ALM often have articles associated with them that no longer reflect their current professional situation. These can be updated or de-indexed as outdated professional information.
Individual misconduct stories. Any article framing an attorney's conduct negatively -- even where the underlying facts are disputed or the context was incomplete -- is a candidate for review when documentation exists to support a different characterization.
Law.com article affecting your practice? Use RemoveNews.ai to generate a professionally framed removal or correction request in 60 seconds -- including the right ALM editorial contact for your specific publication.
Generate Free RequestALM Media maintains a formal editorial standards and corrections process. Unlike general consumer press, where corrections are often informally managed, ALM has ombudsman-level editorial review for significant disputes -- reflecting the professional audience the publications serve.
ALM editors are legal industry professionals who understand that their coverage of attorneys, firms, and legal matters has direct professional consequences. This creates a culture of editorial accountability that is more pronounced than in general news outlets. When an attorney presents a well-documented correction request, the editorial response rate is meaningfully higher than what you would see from, say, a general interest newspaper covering the same story.
Corrections at ALM publications typically take the form of: (1) updates appended to the original article noting the changed circumstances, (2) standalone correction notices, (3) full article removal in cases involving private attorneys with no ongoing public interest, or (4) de-indexing where the article is outdated and the subject has no current public profile.
The key to successfully engaging ALM's corrections process is professionalism and documentation. Attorneys who approach ALM with the same evidentiary standards they would apply in a legal proceeding -- documented facts, cited sources, clear articulation of the specific error -- receive substantively different treatment than those who send emotional or threatening correspondence. Court records from PACER or CourtListener are particularly valuable as primary source documentation when disputing case outcome coverage.
Bar disciplinary action overturned, stayed, or successfully completed. This is the single strongest grounds for a Law.com correction request. If the original article covered a bar action and the action has since been resolved in your favor -- dismissed, successfully appealed, or completed with reinstatement -- the article is factually incomplete and an update request is appropriate.
Case outcome updated. An article reporting a malpractice verdict against an attorney becomes factually incomplete if the verdict is reversed on appeal, the case is remanded, or a subsequent settlement includes confidentiality provisions about the original verdict. These are legitimate grounds for update requests.
Documented factual errors. Incorrect firm name, wrong practice area, wrong case outcome amounts, misattributed quotes, incorrect year of events -- any verifiable factual error supported by documentation is reviewable.
Private attorney with no public-interest news value. An attorney who is not a public figure -- not a prominent partner at a major firm, not involved in high-profile litigation -- and who was caught in coverage of a local or minor matter may have grounds for removal citing lack of ongoing public interest.
"Law.com and ALM publications are more responsive to documented corrections than the general consumer press -- partly because they serve the legal community and accuracy is reputationally important to them. A professionally framed request with documentation has a meaningful success rate. We have seen ALM update bar disciplinary coverage, correct case outcome articles, and remove lateral move coverage that contained material inaccuracies."
The correct contact structure for ALM Media editorial outreach is hierarchical and specific to which publication carried the article.
Primary contact: editorial@alm.com. This is the corporate editorial contact for ALM Media and the appropriate starting point for correction requests that involve ALM's editorial standards. You can also submit requests through the Law.com customer service portal. Route your initial request here with a clear subject line identifying the article, publication, and nature of the correction requested.
Publication-specific managing editor. Each ALM publication has a current managing editor listed in its masthead. For significant matters, a direct message to the managing editor of the specific publication that carried the article -- in addition to the corporate editorial contact -- is appropriate. This creates parallel channels and demonstrates the seriousness of your request.
The reporter who wrote the piece is not your first contact. This is a common mistake. Reporters do not control whether corrections are published or articles are removed -- editors do. Going directly to the reporter often creates defensiveness and does not move the editorial review process forward. Always address editorial management, not the individual reporter.
Do not attempt to use your state bar complaint process as leverage against ALM Media. Suggesting -- even implicitly -- that a bar complaint could follow editorial non-compliance signals bad faith and often hardens editorial resistance. Keep legal and editorial channels completely separate. A professional, evidence-based correction request is your most effective tool.
Bar disciplinary coverage requires specific strategic treatment because state bar proceedings are public records and ALM considers them squarely within the public interest scope of its legal industry coverage. ALM will not remove an article simply because the attorney objects to having their bar action covered -- public disciplinary proceedings are legitimate news for the legal community.
However, the public interest argument weakens significantly when the original disciplinary matter is resolved. An article reporting that an attorney received a suspension and is currently suspended presents a different factual picture than an article reporting that the attorney received a suspension, completed it, and has been reinstated in good standing. The latter is the current fact -- and the current article is incomplete without it.
The most realistic outcome for bar disciplinary coverage is an update that adds the resolution context to the original article. ALM is generally willing to append: "Editor's note: [Attorney name]'s suspension was completed on [date] and [attorney] has been reinstated to good standing by the [State] bar." This does not remove the original coverage but substantially changes how the article reads and ranks.
Full removal of bar disciplinary coverage is possible -- but requires either a documented factual error in the original article or a showing that the action was improperly reported (e.g., the article described charges that were never formally filed, or the bar action cited was against a different attorney with a similar name). These are specific, documented grounds -- not general objections to the coverage. A retraction demand letter from counsel can be an effective escalation tool when documented errors exist and editorial outreach has stalled. Attorneys should also consider consulting a news article removal attorney who understands the intersection of media law and professional reputation.
If ALM Media declines your correction or removal request, the following parallel tracks are available:
Google de-indexing. Google's URL removal tool for outdated personal information is available for private attorneys whose coverage has no ongoing public interest. An article about a minor bar matter from five years ago involving an attorney who is not publicly prominent is a viable de-indexing candidate. The article remains on Law.com but disappears from search results.
Attorney directory optimization. The most powerful suppression strategy for attorneys is building and maintaining authoritative profiles on platforms that rank above Law.com for name searches: Martindale-Hubbell, Avvo, Chambers and Partners, Super Lawyers, FindLaw, LinkedIn. A complete, regularly updated Martindale profile consistently outranks most ALM coverage in Google search results for individual attorney names.
LinkedIn authority content. An active LinkedIn profile with regular professional content -- published articles, case commentary, firm news -- ranks very well for attorney name searches and can displace Law.com coverage from the first page of results over several months of consistent activity. See our full suppression campaign guide for a step-by-step approach.
Authoritative bar association profiles. Official state bar profiles, ABA profiles, and specialty bar association listings are trusted by Google and rank well for attorney name searches. Ensuring these profiles are complete, current, and professionally presented contributes to suppression strategy.
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