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State or Federal Court for Legal-Mal Suit Against Baker Botts?
On Feb. 20, a unanimous U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Gunn v. Minton that legal-malpractice cases are best left to state courts rather than federal courts. But what happens when a defendant firm indicates that it would rather stay in federal court? Baker Botts is about to find out. Jon Suder represents a company that sued the firm.Mazdabrook Commons Homeowners' Association v. Khan
The homeowners' association's sign policy violates the free speech clause of the state constitution.Chief Judge Puts Middle District Court Filings Online
U.S. District Judge Thomas I. Vanaskie realized a central goal of his tenure as chief judge of the Middle District of Pennsylvania last March when the court became the latest federal district to implement an electronic case filing system.Leader of Weil's National Appellate Practice Leaves for Boutique
Gregory S. Coleman, head of Weil, Gotshal & Manges' national appellate litigation practice, has left the firm's Austin, Texas, office to join 23-lawyer litigation boutique Yetter & Warden. Coleman joined Weil Gotshal's Austin office in 2001. Before that, he was Texas' first solicitor general, a post he assumed in 1999 after having been an associate at Weil Gotshal in Houston. He said that during the time he led the national appellate practice, he built the group to about 10 full-time appellate lawyers.View more book results for the query "*"
Justice Stevens Calls Attention to 'Serious Flaws' in Death Penalty
Sharply condemning the country's death penalty system, Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens, in remarks to the American Bar Association over the weekend, steered the debate on President George W. Bush's high court nominee to a new subject: capital punishment. The Court has been closely divided in death row cases, with the departing Justice Sandra Day O'Connor often in the middle. John Roberts, the president's choice to replace O'Connor, has a limited track record in that area.Casey Anthony defender says holes in state's forensics case help explain acquittal
The National Law Journal speaks with Casey Anthony defense attorney Dorothy Clay Sims about the case and the fallout from the verdict.Trending Stories
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