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Brobeck's Snow in Running for Oregon Law School Post
Tower Snow Jr. apparently is not planning to stick around at Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison when he steps down as chairman at the end of the year. Several weeks ago Snow threw his name into the ring with 50 other applicants to become dean of the University of Oregon School of Law. The move would be a dramatic change for Snow, who helped propel San Francisco-based Brobeck Phleger to the forefront of the fast-paced tech arena.Refining 'Miranda': Determining Two-Stage Interrogations
In their Second Circuit Review, Martin Flumenbaum and Brad S. Karp, members of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, review a decision handed down in December, United States v. Capers, which clarifies fundamental Second Circuit and Supreme Court precedent, providing critical guidance to district courts that apply Miranda, and has likely placed the circuit at the center of future Miranda legal discourse.Typing Error May Void Drug Conviction
A Middletown man might escape conviction, even after police found more than 7 pounds of marijuana at his house. He can thank a faulty arrest warrant and an unforgiving Appellate Court for his possible good fortune. Police agencies contacted by the iLaw Tribune/i were not concerned by the decision. Perhaps that's because they were unaware of it.View more book results for the query "*"
Mortgage rates rise after 13 straight lows
The 30-year fixed mortgage rate jumped to 3.55 percent, up from 3.49 percent last week.Scalia, Breyer debate unanimity on the high court
Last week it became clear that the Court is not even unanimous on whether unanimity is realistic or worth striving for.The Federal Courts: A Bastion of Democracy
The attorney general's seeming suggestion that the judiciary acquiesce in the decisions of the White House and Congress in national security matters invites a dangerous trampling of the constitutional authority of the federal courts.Calif. Bar Welcomes Out-of-Staters -- for a Hefty Price
The California State Bar is throwing open the door to out-of-state lawyers, but strict conditions and high costs have some worried about tripping over the welcome mat. The State Bar Board of Governors has approved new rules, to go into effect Nov. 15, that let in-house counsel and legal services lawyers practice in California without taking the state's bar exam. But some say the steep fees will discourage relatively low-paid legal services lawyers from applying to work in the state.Trending Stories
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