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May 21, 2007 | National Law Journal

A bean ball for victims

Let us not overlook the fact that several of the nation's premier banking institutions � Credit Suisse, Barclays and Merrill Lynch � helped concoct the bogus deals allowing Enron to falsify its finances. They then sold Enron's securities, pushed its stock � and wildly profited.

By Bill Lerach and Al Meyerhoff/Special to The National Law Journal

5 minute read

May 30, 2012 | The American Lawyer

Call it Heresy, But Law Firms Require an Outside Perspective

Dewey & LeBoeuf's collapse is just the latest example of why law firm leaders need to look beyond their firms' inner circles and bring in outside directors.

By Paul Bellows and Al Conti

6 minute read

March 24, 2008 | National Law Journal

Courting big business

Overturning Roe v. Wade and further erosion of our civil liberties are two reasons the U.S. Supreme Court should be central to the presidential election. There is a third. With a string of decisions siding with Big Business, the Supreme Court has declared open season on your wallet. Roe is (barely) still standing. You can always stay off that wiretapped phone. But don't sit by while your heart valve explodes, your home loan balloons and Wall Street steals you blind.

By Al Meyerhoff / Special to The National Law Journal

5 minute read

April 15, 2009 | Daily Report Online

Lawyer joke gives way to investment banker anger

Used-car salesmen, lawyers and journalists can relax; they've been replaced as America's favorite villains by corporate executives, or at least investment bankers. Hailed only a short while ago as masters of the universe and princes of perpetual profits, they now are reviled. Consider: Americans, no surprise, overwhelmingly oppose the huge bonuses that are paid to employees by Wall Street companies, according to polls.

By Al Hunt

5 minute read

October 10, 2008 | National Law Journal

Mostly small change

The economy is hanging by a $700 billion thread as global markets plunge. Yet the bailout bill did not address any of the root causes of this potential catastrophe. Nothing in the bailout bill will deter another such meltdown. There has been no shortage of proposed reforms elsewhere. Make sure taxpayers get full return; authorize bankruptcy judges to provide foreclosure relief; create new jobs. But Congress chose instead to cut taxes while borrowing $700 billion from the Chinese and the Saudis. Go figure.

By Al Meyerhoff / Special to The National Law Journal

5 minute read

January 12, 2007 | National Law Journal

Coming soon: Enron II

Memories of Enron are fresh, and voter anger palpable. So this effort should be DOA in the new Congress, right? Maybe not.

By Bill Lerach & Al Meyerhoff/Special to The National Law Journal

5 minute read

December 01, 2008 | Daily Report Online

Bin Laden's ex-driver home in Yemen after Gitmo

SAN'A, Yemen AP _ Osama bin Laden's former driver returned home to Yemen Wednesday to serve out his remaining prison sentence after the U.S. released him from Guantanamo Bay, American and Yemeni officials said.Salim Hamdan was transferred to Yemeni custody and taken to a state security prison after he arrived at a military base at San'a International Airport Wednesday night, a Yemeni security official said.

By AHMED AL-HAJ

4 minute read

November 19, 2007 | National Law Journal

The fire next time

Our politicians continue to give each other high fives and deservedly praise firefighters for finally extinguishing the California fires. But the firestorms shattered the lives of thousands and were the foreseeable result of failed public policies at local, state and national levels. Unlike other threats that resonate with the public, concerns about the environment are still too often dismissed. If there is a lesson to take from this tragedy, it is that we still do too little to prevent such calamities.

By Al Meyerhoff / Special to The National Law Journal

5 minute read

August 06, 2010 | Daily Report Online

With ban looming, some Saudis sell off BlackBerrys

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia AP - Some Saudis were trying to sell their BlackBerrys ahead of a ban on the smart phone's messenger service in the kingdom - but with few willing to buy, they're having to slash prices.The Saudi telecoms regulatory agency announced earlier this week the service would be halted Friday.

By ABDULLAH AL-SHIHRI

5 minute read

June 30, 2008 | National Law Journal

Voting is not final say

The next round in the culture wars is scheduled for this fall in California. Voters will decide on a measure to ban — actually reban — same-sex marriage. Yet the actual "decider" may be the U.S. Supreme Court. Should the ballot measure pass, it will immediately be under a federal constitutional cloud. As Justice Robert Jackson wrote, "Fundamental rights may not be submitted to a vote, they depend on no elections." If the measure passes, it should be struck down. But Californians should vote it down instead.

By Al Meyerhoff / Special to The National Law Journal

5 minute read