By Vincent A. Cino and David M. Walsh | August 28, 2006
As the New Jersey Supreme Court recognized in Brill v. Guardian Life Insurance, 142 N.J. 520 (1995), "we live in what is widely perceived as a time of great increase in litigation and o
By Jesselyn Radack | March 2, 2007
I was not surprised to read that the Pentagon's former deputy assistant secretary, Charles D. Stimson, attacked law firms for representing Guant�namo Bay detainees. (The furor over his remarks
By Robert Kunstadt | February 13, 2006
On Christmas, the U.S. Patent Office announced that international patent applications filed in the United States can now be examined in Korea for only $218 instead of the regular fee of $600.
October 30, 2006
Bar Replies to Report of Half-Million-Dollar Loss Dear Editor: For many years, the New Jersey Law Journal published factually inaccurate stories about the finance
By Lynne Bernabei and Jason Zuckerman | June 26, 2006
Sherron Watkins, the lone whistleblower at Enron, is the one bright spot in the company's otherwise tawdry history of corruption and scandal. In August 2001, she warned Kenneth Lay that fraudu
By Scott Dodson | November 8, 2004
One of the highly charged issues in this election year is the constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage. Supporters such as Professor Teresa Stanton Collett and Sen. John Corn
By Arthur H. Bryant | April 4, 2005
This is a unique time in our nation's history. America was founded by people who understood that power unchecked is power abused. That's why we have, among other things, separation of powers,
By Christopher T. Walsh | April 11, 2005
The case of Community Hosp. Group, Inc. v. More [digested in this issue at page 45], decided last Tuesday, gave the state Supreme Court the opportunity to revisit its nearly 30-year-old
By William A. Niskanen | December 29, 2006
The stereotype is that Democrats are less open to the concerns of American business than are Republicans. The surprising - indeed, encouraging - reality is that the new Democratic majority in
By James Dabney Miller | January 31, 2005
The U.S. Supreme Court's decision this month to review Arthur Andersen's criminal conviction for destroying internal documents relating to its audits of Enron was both surprising and welcome.
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