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Judge Orders Recall of Racy Book Bearing Blues Singer's Photograph
A federal judge in Newark on Tuesday ordered a publisher to stop using an unauthorized photograph of a Grammy-nominated singer on the cover of a book about the life and sexual escapades of a convicted crack-cocaine dealer.Lawyers Joust Over Seal on Bail Transcripts in Closed 9/11 Case
Judge Marilyn Clark in Passaic County, N.J., heard arguments last week in a challenge by six newspapers to Clark's continuing seal on the transcripts of secret bail hearings of a man accused of selling forged IDs to two Sept. 11 hijackers. During Mohammed El-Atriss' prosecution, Clark excluded both the public and the defendant from bail hearings, a move she described as "absolutely unique" in her 14 years on the bench.Justice signals challenge to Google-Yahoo deal
WASHINGTON AP - In a possible blow to Yahoo Inc.'s hopes for an advertising partnership with Google Inc., the Justice Department has hired an antitrust litigator to review evidence for what could become a legal challenge to the deal.The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday that the attorney is Sanford Litvack, a former vice chairman at Walt Disney Co.Georgia's forecast calls for temperatures in teens
ATLANTA AP - The National Weather Service says Georgia may see the coldest weather of the winter this week when arctic air heads southward and two cold front bring temperatures below normal.Meteorologist Stephen Konarik says residents in the Atlanta area could see temperatures in the high teens by the end of the week.Medicaid settlement reached on Whistle-blower claims
Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum reached an $8.5 million settlement in a Medicaid fraud suit that began as a whistle-blower claim by a small Key West pharmacy.View more book results for the query "*"
Delta pilots union chief says combination 'may indeed be at our door'
The Churn: Lateral Moves and Promotions in The Am Law 200
Letters to the Editor: Put Death Row on the Pill
GCs Warned to Prep Litigation War Chests
Some 200 GCs and human resource directors gathered in Washington, D.C., last week for a horror story. The tale -- told by lawyers from Epstein Becker & Green -- concerned employees, federal regulation and an expected wave of big-ticket litigation over issues like benefits, equal pay and layoffs. For employment lawyers, it's certainly a happy day. But that doesn't appear to give their in-house brethren much consolation. Several say they're bulking up legal budgets for what's coming down the pipeline.Trending Stories
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