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High Court's New Rules Address Critics' Privacy Concerns
The Supreme Court appears to have backed away from a controversial proposed rule change that critics said would have threatened the privacy of groups that file amicus curiae or friend-of-the-court briefs with the justices. Following a public comment period that apparently led the justices to reconsider their proposal, the Court on Tuesday issued new rules that will take effect Oct. 1. The rule as promulgated addresses objections voiced by government lawyers and amicus groups across the spectrum.Justice Alito: crusader for privacy?
Justice Samuel Alito Jr.'s concurring opinion in the U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision involving the Fourth Amendment and GPS surveillance triggered as many conflicting reviews among scholars, court watchers and others as the justices' decision itself.Lessons for Lawyers From L'affaire Tiger Woods
Author's note: The author has no inside information on Tiger Woods and is offering his opinions based on his observations.The Churn.Gov: Lateral Moves From Feds to Firm
The new year brings big changes for many former elected officials. Arlen Specter, the longest serving U.S. Senator in Pennsylvania's history, is taking a teaching gig; congressman Earl Pomeroy and his chief of staff head to Alston & Bird; and Senator Kit Bond is joining Thompson Coburn.View more book results for the query "*"
Daily Decision Alert: Vol. 10, No. 115 -- June 17, 2002
Amarchand Adds Delhi Litigation Partner
Ajit Warrier was previously a partner in Delhi with Luthra & Luthra.Long v. Marubeni America Corp.
Adverse Actions Occurred After Company's EVP Employment Ceased; No Retaliation Claim StatedDoor Opens on Patients' HMO Suits
HMOs face the sharpest attack yet on their nearly inviolable protection from patient lawsuits. Using a recent Supreme Court decision originally hailed as a victory for HMOs, plaintiffs' attorneys are seeking to remove the protections that have kept HMOs out of state courts -- and they've gotten a boost from the Department of Labor's endorsement of patients' right to sue HMOs under state law.Trending Stories
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