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Single Derogatory Comment Not Enough for Bias Claim
A single comment does not discrimination make. A decision by the U.S. District Court of Connecticut illustrates that while there is increased concern, post-Sept. 11, over inappropriate comments in the workplace towards those of Arab descent, a single comment will not be sufficient to prove national origin discrimination.$1 million buys pair of agricultural parcels in Palm Beach County
Palmore: We're laying the foundation for a more diverse profession
General Mills Inc. General Counsel Roderick Palmore has been chairman of the Leadership Council on Legal Diversity for three years. He talks to NLJ about the council's work and his decision to step down from the chairmanship.Paul Hastings Denies Reports of Layoffs
An e-mail from a fired Paul Hastings associate has spurred chatter that the firm is laying off attorneys. But the firm says that's not so. Spokeswoman Eileen King says that, while some associates have been let go, they were part of typical performance reviews and the numbers were in line with last year's cuts. Talk of Paul Hastings' head count has arisen in the wake of Shinyung Oh's leaked e-mail to Paul Hastings associates, in which she noted that the firm let her go six days after a miscarriage.Attorney Spouses Eligible for Fee Awards in Civil Rights Cases, 9th Circuit Rules
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Businesses as Consumer Fraud Act Plaintiffs
The narrow contours of corporate standing under the CFA.OCC: Principal-Protected Products in Hedge Fund Transactions
Alice Yurke, a partner at Morrison & Foerster, dissects a September 2004 report from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.Bucks Judge OKs Weddings by Internet Ministers
A minister ordained over the Internet who has no congregation and no church to preach in is nonetheless empowered under Pennsylvania law to preside over marriage ceremonies, a Bucks County judge has ruled.Wiley Rein, Insurer Sanctioned $1.25 Million
Failure to disclose a key insurance document for the Port Authority at the World Trade Center in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks and other discovery abuses will cost Wiley Rein and Coughlin Duffy. The firms and the insurance company they represented have been sanctioned $1.25 million by a New York judge, who said the company's document destruction and attorneys' misleading statements added millions of dollars to the cost of prosecuting suits on behalf of people who suffered losses in the 2001 attacks.Trending Stories
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