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Lethal injection stays not consistent in U.S.
A frustrated five-judge minority on the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decried the dysfunctional patchwork of stays and executions in capital cases since January, when the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to explore a procedural attack on lethal injection.Federal Circuit Denies Compensation To Vaccine Act Claimants
The Federal Circuit Court of Appeals reverses a ruling that two petitioners are entitled to compensation under the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, finding the U.S. Court of Federal Claims was mistaken in rejecting findings of a special master.Lady Gaga Promoter Sues to Collect Terrorism Insurance
Concert promoter Live Nation has sued syndicates of insurer Lloyd's of London for their "despicable conduct" in refusing to cover losses stemming from a performance by Lady Gaga in Indonesia that was canceled last year after the pop star received threats from an Islamic terrorist group.Latest Bench Picks Won't Mollify Critics
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger filled 20 judicial vacancies around the state, including lots of white men.View more book results for the query "*"
New York Lawyer Consumed by Litigation Against IBM, Union Carbide
When William L. DeProspo heard 26-year-old Keith Barrack's report of being diagnosed with testicular cancer after working at International Business Machines Corporation making computer chips, the Goshen, N.Y., lawyer started digging. Now DeProspo is preparing for trial in the first of about 200 lawsuits brought on behalf of children born to workers at IBM's semiconductor chip manufacturing factory.Corporate Computer Security Breaches May Be Down, but Costs per Breach Are Rising
Companies are still struggling with electronic crimes, but reporting some progress, according to the third annual "E-Crime Watch Survey" released by The Carnegie Mellon University Software Engineering Institute, U.S. Secret Service, CSO Magazine and Microsoft. The results indicate that companies are becoming more able to stop widespread security breaches, as both the mean and median number of incidents per company fell compared to the last two years. However, costs per incident rose by 50 percent.People v. Samuel Malave and Ralph Roman
Show-Up Identifications of Alleged Robbers Were Not Unduly Suggestive; Suppression DeniedTrending Stories
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