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December 01, 2008 | The American Lawyer

Big Deals

JPMorgan/WaMu;Wells Fargo/Wachovia; MidAmerican Energy/Constellation
10 minute read
February 14, 2001 | Law.com

Old Firm, New Tricks

Despite increased revenue and being the only Seattle-based firm to make the 1999 Am Law 100 chart, Perkins Coie faced an identity crisis in 2000 as Silicon Valley firms moved north. Perkins was used to being the big fish in a small pond; now big-city-associate salaries threatened its retention rate. A new funky office space, an innovative bonus system and a little optimism saved the day.
17 minute read
July 02, 2008 | Law.com

Eleventh Circuit Sides With National Geographic in Copyright Case

Back-to-back rulings by federal appellate courts in Atlanta and New York favoring the National Geographic Society will allow magazine and newspaper publishers to transfer their published archives to computer discs and sell them commercially without infringing on freelance contributors' copyrights. The publisher of National Geographic has battled freelance writers and photographers over whether it must pay them additional royalties associated with the sale of "The Complete National Geographic" -- a digital version of the magazine's published archive.
9 minute read
September 09, 2010 | New York Law Journal

News In Brief

5 minute read
December 19, 2002 | Law.com

Conseco Seeks Ch. 11 Protection

Conseco Inc., the troubled insurance and finance company, filed for Chapter 11 late Tuesday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Illinois. The filing is the third-largest bankruptcy in U.S. history. The move came after Conseco reached agreements with two of three groups of creditors owed $6.5 billion.
3 minute read
August 26, 2008 | Law.com

Calif. High Court Surprises by Expanding Arbitration Review

Possibly running afoul of the U.S. Supreme Court, California's high court on Monday ruled that judicial review for legal error is allowed if all parties contractually agree to it beforehand. The ruling shocked New York attorney Daniel Osborn, who represented the losing litigant. Surprisingly, the majority held that it wasn't constrained by the U.S. Supreme Court's March ruling in Hall Street Associates L.L.C. v. Mattel Inc., which came to an opposite conclusion under the Federal Arbitration Act.
4 minute read
November 29, 2000 | Law.com

In Re Ruff: At the Impeachment Trial

Legal Times has gathered anecdotes from lawyers and members of Congress who worked closely -- as friend or foe -- during the President Clinton impeachment process, including the trial.
9 minute read
October 28, 2002 | National Law Journal

Chart: Out-of-Towners

4 minute read
October 02, 2002 | Law.com

Rule Changes for Class Actions Clear Hurdle

The U.S. Judicial Conference has unanimously accepted proposed changes to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23, which governs the handling of class actions. One important change would allow judges to reject a proposed settlement unless class members are given a second chance to request exclusion from the class after the settlement terms are known. If accepted by the U.S. Supreme Court and Congress, the amendments would go into effect on Dec. 1, 2003.
5 minute read
February 25, 2002 | Law.com

Top Litigator Bids Farewell to Pennie & Edmonds

Jonathan A. Marshall, senior partner at New York's Pennie & Edmonds and a driving force behind the firm's rise to a powerhouse among IP boutiques, is joining Weil, Gotshal & Manges. Marshall's imminent departure is a striking illustration of what many attorneys acknowledge is a growing trend: the expansion of large, general-practice firms onto turf previously occupied by IP boutiques.
7 minute read

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