Guam CLE - All Courses
This is a listing of CLE Courses for Guam. Please make your selection below of Guam CLE courses. Click "Add To Cart" to purchase Individual CLE Courses. For more information about a particular CLE course, click on the "More Info" link. Click the "Preview" button to view a short preview of the course.
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Misconduct, Evidence, and Credibility: How Unemployment Insurance Appeals Are Decided
This CLE course provides a practical overview of how unemployment insurance appeals are decided and why similar cases often lead to different outcomes. The course begins with core UI program principles, including eligibility versus disqualification, sources of legal authority, and appeal rights. Participants will examine the structure and mechanics of unemployment appeal hearings, including jurisdiction, burdens of proof, evidentiary standards, and witness examination in administrative... More Info
$501General Credit -
Crimmigration: Avoid Giving Bad Advice to Immigrant Defendants
This CLE course focuses on how criminal proceedings can directly affect a non-citizen’s immigration status and long-term ability to remain in the United States. By exploring the overlap between criminal defense and immigration law, the program provides practical guidance for identifying issues that may trigger adverse immigration outcomes. Participants will learn how to provide accurate, legally sound advice to immigrant clients, minimize avoidable mistakes, and uphold the ethical and... More Info
$501General Credit -
Projecting the Future of Cannabis Law: Policy, Market, and Compliance Impacts
This CLE program explores the legal contradictions and policy shifts that have defined cannabis regulation in the United States for more than half a century. Although cannabis was once a commonly used agricultural and medicinal product, federal law dramatically changed course in 1970 when the Controlled Substances Act classified it as a Schedule I substance—effectively criminalizing most uses, restricting scientific research, and declaring it to have no accepted medical value. Despite t... More Info
$501General Credit -
Long-Term Disability Insurance Claims: From Application to Federal Court
Long-term disability (LTD) insurance claims sit at the intersection of contract law, insurance law, and—frequently—federal ERISA law. Nearly half of all LTD claims arise under employer-sponsored group policies governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), which imposes a highly restrictive administrative framework and limits litigation exclusively to federal court. Other LTD matters involve individual policies commonly purchased by professionals, as well as associati... More Info
$501General Credit -
Navigating FinCEN’s New Rule on Residential Real Estate Transactions
This CLE program provides a practical and timely analysis of FinCEN’s new residential real estate reporting rule and its implications for attorneys involved in real estate transactions. The rule represents a significant expansion of federal anti-money laundering oversight into the residential real estate market and imposes new reporting obligations for certain non-financed transactions involving legal entities and trusts. Participants will examine the scope and purpose of the rule, the... More Info
$501General Credit -
Professional Responsibility in Law Firm Transitions
This ethics-focused CLE program examining the professional responsibility obligations implicated in law firm sales, acquisitions, mergers, and internal transitions. The course centers on the Rules of Professional Conduct governing client protection, confidentiality, conflicts of interest, fee arrangements, supervision, and competent representation during periods of firm change. Participants will explore the ethics rules applicable to selling and purchasing a law firm, including client n... More Info
$501Ethics Credit -
The New Definition of Legal Ethics and Competence in the Age of AI
This ethics CLE examines how artificial intelligence affects lawyers’ professional obligations under existing Rules of Professional Conduct. While the Model Rules themselves have not materially changed, the program discusses how evolving legal workflows and increased reliance on technology influence the application of ethical standards relating to competence, communication, confidentiality, supervision, and candor. The course addresses the use of AI as a tool in legal practice, includi... More Info
$751.5Ethics Credits -
Putting It All Together: Practice in Integrated Domestic Violence Parts of the Unified Court System
This CLE course offers a practical overview of practice in the Integrated Domestic Violence (IDV) Parts, where criminal, family, and civil matters involving the same family are heard together under the “One Family, One Judge” model. The course addresses the structure and rules governing IDV Parts, jurisdictional and ethical considerations, orders of protection, motion practice, conferences, hearings, and trial scheduling, as well as strategic challenges faced by attorneys representing pe... More Info
$501General Credit -
Ethics in Mediation Practice: What ABA 518 Means for Attorneys
As mediation continues to expand across legal practice, so do the ethical responsibilities placed on attorney-mediators and advocates who participate in the process. With the recent release of ABA Formal Opinion 518, attorneys are now faced with new guidance—and new questions—regarding neutrality, client communication, conflicts, and the boundaries of advocacy within a mediated setting. This CLE program breaks down what ABA 518 means in practical terms, outlining how it aligns with and... More Info
$501Ethics Credit -
Ghosts in the Machine: Navigating the AI Ethics Frontier
Artificial Intelligence has moved from a "novelty" to a "standard of care" requirement. This CLE course provides an essential update for practitioners on the rapidly evolving ethical obligations surrounding generative and agentic AI. We will move beyond the basics of "don’t hallucinate" to explore the next generation of risks: agentic AI autonomy, AI-driven billing scrutiny, and the emerging duty of technological competence that may soon penalize lawyers for failing to use AI efficiently.... More Info
$501Ethics Credit