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March 07, 2013 | Corporate Counsel

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.
3 minute read
May 19, 2008 | The Recorder

Latest Bench Picks Won't Mollify Critics

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger filled 20 judicial vacancies around the state, including lots of white men.
4 minute read
January 08, 2001 | Law.com

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.
1 minute read
December 15, 2004 | New York Law Journal

Farrell v. Burke

Seized Book Constituted Pornography Whose Possession Violated Special Condition of Parole
1 minute read
January 21, 2004 | The Legal Intelligencer

People in the News

Movers and Shakers in the Philadelphia legal community
3 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Pennsylvania Causes of Action, 12th Edition Authors: GAETAN J. ALFANO, RONALD J. SHAFFER, JOSHUA C. COHAN View this Book

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November 14, 2006 | Corporate Counsel

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.
3 minute read
September 20, 2004 | New York Law Journal

People v. Samuel Malave and Ralph Roman

Show-Up Identifications of Alleged Robbers Were Not Unduly Suggestive; Suppression Denied
1 minute read
April 15, 2003 | Law.com

WorldCom Files Reorganization Plan

The bankrupt telecom WorldCom and its major creditor groups unveiled a plan for the biggest Chapter 11 restructuring ever on Monday when the company filed its reorganization plan with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. Under the proposal, the reorganized company would have $3.5 billion to $4.5 billion in net debt, depending on how many creditors opt to receive bonds as part of their recoveries.
4 minute read
December 28, 2006 | New York Law Journal

'Raffellini,' Serious Injury Under SUM Endorsement

New York practitioners Mitchell S. Lustig and Jill Lakin Schatz write that a recent Second Department decision continues the trend of cases where the courts have shown a tendency to provide a heightened degree of protection to those insureds who have opted to pay an additional premium and purchase SUM coverage as opposed to those who only maintain the statutory uninsured motorist endorsement.
11 minute read
March 09, 2009 | Connecticut Law Tribune

Are Lawyers Paying Too Much For PACER?

U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut has asked the policy body of the federal judiciary why it continues to charge the public and lawyers for access to electronically filed documents and whether enough is being done to protect the personal data collected by courts.
3 minute read