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Court vacates FCC order, lets states regulate cell phone bills
Atlanta lawyer surveys malpractice laws, state by state
Scott Bertschi, a partner at Atlanta-based Arnall Golden Gregory, has the big-picture perspective on lawyers in trouble. He's just finished editing A 50-State Survey of Legal Malpractice Law, published by the American Bar Association, which gives an overview of the laws governing attorney wrongdoing in every jurisdiction in the country.Percy Sutton, attorney for Malcolm X, dead at 89
NEW YORK AP - Percy Sutton, the pioneering civil rights attorney who represented Malcolm X before launching successful careers as a political power broker and media mogul, died Saturday at age 89.Marissa Shorenstein, a spokeswoman for Gov. David Paterson, confirmed Sutton's death. She did not know the cause. His daughter, Cheryl Sutton, declined to comment when reached by phone at her New York City home on Saturday before midnight.Three REITs offer fat dividends, likely gains
The U.S. stock market hit a low in March 2009 and the recession officially ended less than four months later. Yet only now are there signs of a bottom in commercial real estate prices. Moody's Commercial Property Price Index topped out in October 2007, just as stocks did, but its fall has lasted longer. The index declined precipitously until August 2010, as prices on commercial property in the U.Big firm life - the Columbus way
Looking out from the glass-walled conference room near the front lobby of Page Scrantom Sprouse Tucker & Ford's contemporary-styled offices, managing partner William Tucker explains the process in which the city of Columbus is partially opening up a dam in the Chattahoochee River to allow more white-water to flow through, setting the stage for completion of the most challenging urban rapids course in the country.View more book results for the query "*"
Rep. John Conyers is back in the game
THERE IS ONLY THE SLIGHTEST undulation in the voice, a dry monotone like that of actor John Malkovich, expressive within a narrow bandwidth of sound. It is a curious voice for a member of Congress who specializes in raising issues of great emotion, an unreconstructed-and unapologetic-liberal first elected to Congress during the Democratic landslide of Lyndon Baines Johnson in 1964.Wachovia's new GC is expert at putting out fires
Wachovia Corp. has had just about every kind of legal trouble that a financial services giant could have. In recent months the company has been buffeted by various accounting problems, a telemarketing fraud, a federal probe into its money laundering prevention practices, and a flood of shareholder suits related to bad mortgages and loans.Aid groups brace for federal cut
The Atlanta Legal Aid Society and Georgia Legal Services Program will be hit hard by a major cut to the federal Legal Services Corp.'s 2012 funding.LSC is the major funder of civil legal assistance in the nation. Congress was expected to vote Thursday on an appropriations bill that will cut the federal entity's $398.Appeals court reverses ruling throwing out safari lawsuit
The Georgia Court of Appeals has revived a suit brought by a man who said he was cheated out of more than $13,000 he paid for a two-week African safari that was canceled.Presiding Judge Anne E. Barnes, joined by the court's newest members, Judges Keith R. Blackwell and Stephen L. A. Dillard, said that a Fulton County Superior Court judge had not considered the proper factors when deciding to toss the man's suit.Trending Stories
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