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Did He Deserve the Death Penalty?
Steven M. Schneebaum, a shareholder in the Washington, D.C., office of Greenberg Traurig, details his work in a death penalty case against Tony Barksdale.High Court Considers Spate Of Job Retaliation Disputes
Job retaliation challenges have arrived en masse at the U.S. Supreme Court as part of the largest onslaught of employment cases on the docket in years. The justices have decided two major retaliation cases in the past three years. This term alone, they have granted review in three cases, two to be argued in February and one - perhaps with the greatest potential impact of the three - as yet unscheduled.Edinburg Solo Pleads Guilty to Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud
An Edinburg solo, part of a group alleged to have solicited investors for purported high-yield trading programs touted as "riskless transactions," has pleaded guilty in California to charges that he conspired to commit wire fraud and made a false statement to a federal officer.View more book results for the query "White"
Judge Denies Killer's 11th Hour Bid for Life
Steven H. [email protected] an execution barely nine hours away, a former state attorney general and a former DeKalb district attorney failed to obtain a temporary restraining order that would have stopped the scheduled execution of Stephen Anthony Mobley.Mobley was scheduled to die by lethal injection at 7 p.m. Tuesday.Four Courses for the High Nine
What is the U.S. Supreme Court dining on from the employment law menu this coming term? It's a four-course meal, and here is what the discerning diner needs to know.As Norex, the first plaintiff whose RICO case was dismissed on Morrison grounds, refashions its lurid allegations as a New York state case, a Brooklyn federal judge has cited Morrison in his dismissal of a similarly provocative RICO case against RJR.
Salty Medical Bills? Applying Haygood v. de Escabedo to Admiralty Cases in Texas
It has been said that legal issues of an admiralty and maritime nature have a certain "saltiness" about them, write Josh N. Bowlin and F. Daniel Knight. At first glance, the Texas Supreme Court's July 1 decision in Haygood v. de Escabedo has little in the way of salty flavor, as it is an appeal of a car wreck case. Admiralty practitioners should be cognizant of this opinion, however, as it has far-reaching impact upon admiralty personal-injury cases filed in Texas state courts.Trending Stories
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