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Charles Toutant

Charles Toutant

Charles Toutant is a litigation writer for the New Jersey Law Journal.

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October 03, 2005 | New Jersey Law Journal

Settlement Proposed in Class Action Over Porous KPMG Tax Shelters

KPMG and Sidley, Austin, Brown & Wood have reached a $225 million settlement with plaintiffs in a class-action suit that charges the firms with having sold bogus tax shelters.

By Charles Toutant

3 minute read

June 29, 2011 | Law.com

Casual Advice to Sister on Divorce Draws Lawyer and Firm Into Malpractice Suit

Defendants in a legal malpractice case are seeking to make Wolff & Samson partner Laurence Smith and his firm responsible for informal advice he gave his sister during her divorce. At issue is his review of documents, his meeting with opposing counsel and his receipt of copies of emails in connection with his sister's case.

By Charles Toutant

4 minute read

November 24, 2004 | Law.com

Spurred by Insurers, General Counsel Posts Popping Up at Large Firms

By Charles Toutant

6 minute read

April 02, 2007 | Law.com

Contempt Lifted Against Lawyer Who Sought to Enter Judge's 'Closed' Courtroom

A New Jersey family court judge was out of line in sanctioning a lawyer for contempt after she was turned away from a "closed" proceeding, an appeals court says. The panel found no basis on the record for Middlesex County Superior Court Judge Fred Kieser Jr.'s decision to hold solo Ida Cambria in summary contempt and fine her $100. Meanwhile, amidst general complaints about courtroom closures, Assignment Judge Robert Longhi reminded judges that proceedings are to be open except as dictated by court rules.

By Charles Toutant

6 minute read

December 05, 2005 | Law.com

Patch-User Suits Abound After Warning

Plaintiff lawyers say the FDA directive appears to have prompted more users of Johnson & Johnson's Ortho Evra contraceptive patch to seek counsel.

By Charles Toutant

7 minute read

February 28, 2011 | New Jersey Law Journal

Use of Student's Psychiatric Profile as Teaching Tool Called a Privacy Invasion

A special education teacher's use of a student's confidential psychiatric evaluation to teach a class on The Catcher in the Rye was a privacy violation, a federal judge says.

By Charles Toutant

5 minute read

August 25, 2003 | New Jersey Law Journal

U.S. Judge Pick for Camden Galls South Jersey

The choice of Peter Sheridan, a GOP stalwart from Mercer County, to fill a federal judgeship in Camden has riled local lawyers and politicians, who see it as yet another case of "North Jersey" carpetbagging.

By Charles Toutant

5 minute read

August 22, 2000 | Law.com

Reporter's Role in Brokering Confession Tests Limits of Newspaper Shield Law

A New Jersey judge must determine whether the state's Shield Law, which protects news reporters' notes, can be pierced when a reporter gets too close to a source. Lawyers for Fred Neulander, a Cherry Hill rabbi charged with arranging his wife's death, are seeking to obtain notes and records from a newspaper reporter who helped police arrest an accomplice to the murder.

By Charles Toutant

7 minute read

June 13, 2005 | New Jersey Law Journal

Emergency-Room Patients Filmed for Reality TV Certified as Plaintiff Class

In a case of first impression in New Jersey, a trial judge has certified a class-action suit in behalf of hospital patients who claim a production company invaded their privacy by the filming of a reality television show in the emergency room.

By Charles Toutant

4 minute read

April 06, 2011 | New Jersey Law Journal

Secretary Candidates Skirmish Over Campaign Use of Bar E-mail, Listservs

In the contested election for State Bar Association secretary, the first rung on the ladder to the presidency, Angela White Dalton and Ivette Alvarez are tussling over the use of State Bar e-mail systems for campaign purposes.

By Charles Toutant

5 minute read