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October 02, 2008 | Law.com

THE GLOBAL 100 2008

19 minute read
October 05, 2009 | National Law Journal

Docket Watch: Upcoming Arguments at the Supreme Court

Cases that are scheduled before the U.S. Supreme Court in the next two weeks. "Docket Watch" appears at the beginning of each argument cycle when the high court hears cases.
6 minute read
June 30, 2004 | Law.com

The Am Law 100

25 minute read
June 30, 2004 | Law.com

The Am Law 100: Compensation All Partners

22 minute read
April 28, 2006 | Law.com

2006 Am Law 100: Two More Billion-Dollar Firms

13 minute read
September 27, 2007 | Law.com

The Global 100

12 minute read
Birmingham v. Mizuno USA, Inc., 5:09-CV-0566 (GTS/GHL)
Publication Date: 2011-04-06
Practice Area: Intellectual Property
Industry:
Court: U.S. District Court, Northern District
Judge: District Judge Glenn T. Suddaby
Attorneys:
For plaintiff: Counsel for Plaintiffs: Kenneth J. Bobrycki, Esq., Elizabeth A. Genung, Esq., J. Matthew Van Ryan, Esq. Of Counsel, Melvin & Melvin, PLLC, Syracuse, New York.
For defendant: Counsel for Defendant: Ashley D. Hayes, Esq., Of Counsel, Hancock Estabrook, LLP, Syracuse, New York. Counsel for Defendant: John M. Bowler, Esq., Of Counsel, Troutman Sanders LLP, Atlanta, Georgia.
Case number: 5:09-CV-0566 (GTS/GHL)

Cite as: Birmingham v. Mizuno USA, Inc., 5:09-CV-0566 (GTS/GHL), NYLJ 1202489123509, at *1 (NDNY, Decided March 31, 2011)District Judge Glenn T. Suddabyp c

November 26, 2007 | Law.com

Blood Money Paid by Chiquita Shows Company's Hard Choices

Chiquita Brands International says it had to pay off Colombian terrorists to protect its employees. The Justice Department says the company simply made an "expedient" choice. An exhaustive look at the four-year probe finds that neither side is exactly right. Documents, as well as interviews with attorneys from both sides, paint a portrait of a GC and a company giving in to extortion. It is the stuff of spy thrillers, describing veiled threats of violence, secret payments and an excruciating moral dilemma.
18 minute read
November 08, 2007 | Law.com

A Jury Without Peer

In a dramatic repudiation of the government's investigation into accounting practices at AOL and PurchasePro, a jury acquitted all three defendants, former executives at the companies. This is the story of how that jury handed the Corporate Fraud Task Force one of its most resounding defeats. The jurors did their job, carefully weighing the evidence to come to a fair verdict. Says federal district court judge Walter Kelley Jr. who oversaw the case: "It was the greatest jury that ever happened anywhere."
28 minute read

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