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Marshall, Texas, federal district court judge T. John Ward didn't even wait for lawyers from Finnegan Henderson to put on their case for ADT Security. He tossed the plaintiff's patent infringement suit as soon as counsel rested.
After the 2010 BP oil spill, the Sierra Club and other environmental groups used a federal statute to challenge the Interior Department's approval of 16 drilling projects in the Gulf of Mexico. A Fifth Circuit panel on Wednesday dismissed the challenges, persuaded in part by arguments made by lawyers at Covington & Burling who represented oil industry trade groups in the case.
Top 10 Texas Plaintiffs Verdicts in 2002
The National Law Journal, an affiliate of Texas Lawyer, ranked the top 10 Texas verdicts of 2002.Lawyers With Disabilities Say Obstacles, Stereotypes Persist
It's been nearly 16 years since the Americans with Disabilities Act went into effect. Lawyers with disabilities say it's still tough to get big-firm jobs, despite the ADA and despite advances in technology that help them handle legal work. "Most attorneys who are blind or visually impaired work for the government or work in solo practice," says Chris Prentice, a solo in Texas who is legally blind. Prentice says he would like to leave solo practice and work at a firm for financial reasons.Texas plaintiffs lawyer Ed Lieck has chutzpah to spare. He somehow persuaded a state court judge to grant him contingency fees based on a TRO his side obtained--even though his local counsel role was extremely limited and his client ultimately paid $24 million to get out of the case. The appeals court put an end to that.
State of Confusion Over Sentencing Guidelines
Everyone is still trying to digest the Supreme Court's landmark Jan. 12 decision that turned the clock back on sentencing practices. The Court called the federal guidelines advisory; DOJ Criminal Division chief Christopher Wray urges judges to continue using them.Ruling Restricts Contractual Interference
A Texas Supreme Court ruling will make it much more difficult to recover damages for interference with a prospective contractual relationship. The case involved allegations that Wal-Mart interfered with a pending real estate deal. An attorney for Wal-Mart says the ruling stands for the proposition that "aggressive but legal interference" in a deal that's in the works cannot be attacked as tortious interference.Trending Stories
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