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Barnes Foundation Court Fight Starts Up Again
Montgomery County and a group of art students, alumni and neighbors of the Barnes Foundation are seeking standing in order to relitigate a judge's 2004 decision allowing the foundation to move its $6 billion art collection to Philadelphia's Museum Row.Want the Legal Work? Better Butter Up Comcast's Top Guy
General counsel Art Block makes all of the calls on how the communications giant spends its massive legal budget, including whether work stays in-house or goes to law firms, according to a recent profile in The Philadelphia Inquirer.Reserve International Liquidity Fund Ltd. v. Caxton Int'l Limited
Interpleader on Fund Asset Distribution Proceeds; Deference to Liquidation Action Is InappropriateSupreme Court Rules Police Don't Need Warrants in Emergencies
The Supreme Court reaffirmed Monday that police can enter homes in emergencies without knocking or announcing their presence. The decision overturned a ruling by Utah's Supreme Court that said a trial judge was correct to throw out charges stemming from the police search. The trial judge ruled that police had violated the Fourth Amendment's prohibition against unreasonable searches by failing to knock before entering the house.View more book results for the query "*"
Robert Marshall Tells His Side
Lately, Robert Marshall has a diversion other than leafing through any of the 10 magazines he receives on death row in New Jersey's Trenton State Prison. Sixteen years after being convicted of contracting the murder of his wife, Maria, in the case that inspired the best seller "Blind Faith," the former Toms River, N.J., insurance salesman is trying to sell himself.Epiq Expands Services and Software
Legal technology provider Epiq Systems is expanding its consulting services and continuing to tweak its DocuMatrix document review software.Matovcik v. Times Beacon Record Newspapers
Court Rejects Summary Judgment Bid To Dismiss Defamation Suit Against PaperFederal Circuit Devotes Extra Time to Amazon's Single Click Patent
At an extraordinary 75-minute oral argument, a federal appeals court wrestled with the validity of e-commerce patents in Amazon.com v. Barnesandnoble.com. The case concerned a December 1999 order barring Barnesandnoble.com from using a single-click ordering system. But clearly, the court wanted to explore broader Internet patent issues vexing IP attorneys and e-commerce entrepreneurs alike.Trending Stories
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