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In a once-sleepy corner of the Treasury Department, regulation of overseas conduct is going strong. That's bad news for European banks, but good news for American foreign policy--and a handful of well-positioned firms that excel at both litigation and bank regulation.
Payne Testifies in Latest Fight to Open Last Olympic Records
Atlanta's chief Olympic organizer, Billy Payne, took the witness stand last week to defend his view that records of Atlanta's bid for the 1996 games are private. Payne, a founder and co-chair of the Georgia Amateur Athletics Foundation, insisted that the group exercised no governmental authority in its successful bid to bring the Olympics to Atlanta.To Land and Keep Good Clients, Firms Need to Think Like Clients
Lawyers like Kevin M. O'Hagan of O'Hagan Smith & Amundsen in Chicago give rainmaking pointers during a seminar at American Bar Association annual meeting, called "A View from the Inside: A Roundtable on Developing and Maintaining Client Relationships." At least 10 seminars scheduled during the ABA's week-long annual meeting in Atlanta deal with rainmaking and with keeping clients happy.Atlanta Falcons Trying to Recover Millions in Bonuses Paid to Vick
How long Michael Vick spends in prison will be determined by federal prosecutors, his criminal defense team and a U.S. District Court judge, but what happens to millions of Vick's bonuses likely will be determined by lawyers for the Atlanta Falcons, the NFL Players Association, the NFL Management Council and possibly both an arbitrator and special master. They will wrestle with the esoteric law of the NFL to find out how much of the $37 million the Falcons paid to their quarterback the team can recover.Roberts Court Takes A Pro-Business Stance
For years, if not decades, leading U.S. Chamber of Commerce lawyer Robin Conrad has told anyone who will listen that a conservative U.S. Supreme Court is not always a pro-business Supreme Court. But now, at the end of a course-changing, gut-wrenching term littered with heated 5-4 decisions, one bit of clarity is shining through: the Roberts Court, and especially its newest member, Samuel Alito Jr., are both very conservative and very pro-business, more so than any Supreme Court in decades.Trending Stories
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