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Staff

Staff

May 23, 2002 | Connecticut Law Tribune

How Can PCs Break Into Television?

The progress of civilization has a recurring theme, with yesterday`s rare luxuries becoming today`s standard necessities.

By Thomas Scheffey Tech Tribune Staff Writer

8 minute read

July 03, 2003 | The Legal Intelligencer

Local Firms Fail to Impress On AmLaw Pro Bono Listings

While more Philadelphia law firms than ever are members of the AmLaw 100 charts that track financial performance, they struggled in the chart that ranks pro bono performance.

By Jeff BlumenthalOf the Legal Staff

6 minute read

June 13, 2008 | The Legal Intelligencer

Berger & Montague Sees $554 Mil. Award Grow to $926 Mil.

Merrill Davidoff of Berger & Montague described the case he has been handling out of Colorado since 1990 in a similar vein to the seemingly never-ending Exxon-Valdez case his firm has labored over for years. But 18 years later, he has something to smile about.

By Gina Passarella Of the Legal Staff

5 minute read

February 15, 2002 | Connecticut Law Tribune

Attorney`s Collection Motives Questioned

Kenneth Harrick died owing his divorce lawyer, Edward Nusbaum, of Westport`s Nusbaum & Parrino, $43,000 in legal fees.

By SCOTT BREDE Law Tribune Staff Writer

4 minute read

February 15, 2002 | Connecticut Law Tribune

Branches Clash In Pregnancy Firing

Advocate Michael D. O`Connell, of Hartford`s O`Connell, Flaherty & Atmore, had a daunting task, convincing the Supreme Court that its own prior decisions prevent it from drawing the lines for sex discrimination in a hot case.

By THOMAS SCHEFFEY Law Tribune Staff Writer

3 minute read

April 14, 2006 | The Legal Intelligencer

Commonwealth Court: ISP Not Entitled to Sales Tax Refund

A nonfacility-based Internet service provider is obligated to pay sales and use taxes on the wireline access it purchased from various telecommunications giants, an en banc panel of the Commonwealth Court has ruled, 6-1.

By Asher Hawkins Of the Legal Staff

6 minute read

June 25, 2003 | The Legal Intelligencer

BB Gun Court Agrees With A Pellet Precedent

A father with shared legal custody who gave his son a BB gun as a Christmas present cannot be held liable for the child's shooting of a neighbor with the gun, the state Supreme Court has ruled, because the child was in the physical custody of his mother at the time of the accident.

By Danielle N. RodierOf the Legal Staff

7 minute read

September 09, 2009 | Daily Business Review

White & Case team completes rare syndicated transaction for $100 million

Emilio J. Alvarez-Farr?, John L. Murphy and Juan Delgado needed two months for the financing of a natural gas field in central Peru that's one of the largest fields in Latin America.

By Review staff

7 minute read

April 28, 2010 | Daily Business Review

White & Case quartet represents Chilean mine in $750M financing

Carlos Viana, Sergio Cabado, Anna Andreeva and Thomas Pate of Miami's White & Case attorneys represented Minera Los Pelambres, a subsidiary of Chile's Antofagasta.

By Review staff

8 minute read

August 06, 2007 | National Law Journal

Lawyers plying jurors with questionnaires

Written questionnaires are becoming an increasingly common way to spot biased jurors, according to trial consultants. The questionnaires can be particularly helpful in highly publicized cases and a growing number of studies have endorsed the use of these questionnaires, helping boost their acceptance with judges. As trials are getting more publicity, said jury consultant Anne Reed, juror questionnaires are a good way for lawyers and judges to gauge the effects of pretrial publicity.

By Vesna Jaksic / Staff reporter

5 minute read