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June 30, 2005 | New York Law Journal

Pro Bono Digest

William J. Dean, executive director of Volunteers of Legal Service, writes that, for the lawyer undertaking a pro bono case, Pro Bono Net serves as an invaluable resource through its volunteer clearinghouse, pro bono training calender and practice areas.
9 minute read
May 19, 2008 | New York Law Journal

Flowers, plaintiffs-appellants-respondents v. 73rd Townhouse LLC, defendant-respondent-appellant

Sale?s Specific Performance Upheld; Case Remanded For Price Adjustment Given Incomplete Renovation
29 minute read
February 01, 2011 | Corporate Counsel

Big Wins and Crushing Defeats

Our roundup of the top ten results from last year's IP litigation docket.
8 minute read
May 31, 2011 | Law.com

The Confidential Nature of Lawsuits

Commentators Joel Cohen and Katherine Helm examine the increasing use of pseudonyms in litigation and the challenge of balancing the public interest against the privacy rights of plaintiffs.
10 minute read
May 09, 2005 | New Jersey Law Journal

Blogging for Fun and Profit

As a promotion and client development tool, blogs are as simple as business cards and cheaper than advertising in the Yellow Pages.
6 minute read
January 16, 2009 | New York Law Journal

Ethics and Criminal Practice

Joel Cohen, a partner at Stroock & Stroock & Lavan and an adjunct professor of law at Fordham Law School, writes: The preachy ethics of academia and a trial lawyer's real world are often at a variance. Herein the hard question lies: How does a lawyer zealously represent his client when it may cause him to break his word and undermine his reputation for integrity?
12 minute read
July 18, 2008 | New York Law Journal

Accolades

For success in a federal class action suit on behalf of disabled New York City children, Douglas W. Henkin received the Jill Chaifetz Award for Excellence in Educational Advocacy from Advocates for Children during the organization's annual benefit last month. Also last month, practitioners, law professors and judges deemed "pioneers" of women's rights by the Veteran Feminists of America in the "seminal years of second-wave feminism" were honored, and Professor George W. Johnson III of Brooklyn Law School was honored with a proclamation from the U.S. District Courthouse in Brooklyn citing his 25 years of "outstanding and exemplary service" as head of the Eastern District Civil Litigation Fund.
9 minute read
Stroock Squares Off Against N.Y. Gallery for Sotheby's in $26 Million Contract Case
Publication Date: 2012-04-05
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Contemporary artist Cady Noland's aluminum plate sculpture "Oozewald" fetched $6.6 million when it went on the block last November. But a separate Noland piece that Sotheby's pulled from the same auction at Noland's request could end up costing the artist and the auction house four times that much.

July 25, 2006 | New York Law Journal

Judge Denies Fee, Calls Legal Work 'Incompetent'

4 minute read
April 12, 2010 | Daily Business Review

EEOC sues over mandatory retirement practices

Bowing to pressure from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Kelley Drye & Warren has dropped its mandatory retirement policy, the firm said.
8 minute read

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