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Business push to soften corporate governance laws
THE PUSH BY business interests for a softening of the laws enacted in response to the 2002 corporate scandals is advancing as an influential private group urges revisions in company accounting rules and reining in lawsuits against corporations.The campaign has gained traction with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson questioning whether regulations are hurting the competitiveness of U.Pa. Judge OKs Settlement of Suit Between IBC, Doctors
A Philadelphia judge has approved a class action settlement worth $40 million to $60 million in a suit against Independence Blue Cross by doctors and other health care providers who said the insurer's reimbursements were unfair and its secret calculations impossible to check. IBC has agreed to disclose fee schedules, stop "bundling" multiple health care services into a single code for reimbursement, and comply with nationally recognized coding standards.Coudert's Demise Puts China In Play
Orrick Chairman Ralph Baxter Jr. still expects to net nine China partners, but other firms are casting about for parts of the coveted practice.Ga. police close case of woman with 5 dead spouses
AUGUSTA, Ga. AP - Georgia authorities have closed an investigation into whether a 76-year-old grandmother killed the last of her five dead husbands, saying Wednesday they didn't detect poison in his remains.Betty Neumar still faces three counts of solicitation to commit first-degree murder in North Carolina in the death of husband No.View more book results for the query "*"
Handicapping Bush's Judicial Nominations
With President Bush's decision to renominate 12 contentious appeals court candidates, the die seemed cast for a repeat of nominee-related filibustering in Congress. A relatively simple compromise could free up some judges, but divisions seem to be hardening. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist has effectively threatened to stop filibusters with a rare parliamentary maneuver referred to by fellow Republicans as the "constitutional" option but described by Democrats as the "nuclear" option.Fitzgerald Leads Legion to Libby Indictment
One convinced a jury to convict a deadly crew of drug dealers that plagued Washington, D.C., for more than a decade. Another helped nab two of the highest-profile spies in recent years. There's the lawyer who took on a Chicago mobster and won, and the young prosecutor who helped disband a ring of exotic animal poachers in the Midwest.Hannah Brothers v. OSK Marketing & Communications Inc.
Court Rejects Bid to Pierce Corporate Veil On Ground of Alleged 'Maritime Joint Venture'Bioethicist-Lawyer Lands Dream Job
Tara L. Adyanthaya is the daughter of an Indian doctor and an Irish nurse who met while working in a Rhode Island hospital. She grew up to be a health care lawyer and a bioethics scholar. Adyanthaya is associate general counsel of Emory University and Emory Healthcare. "I feel like I'm a kid in a candy store because I really love health care and I'm just steeped in it," she says. She also flies to Philadelphia regularly to continue part-time work on a master's degree at the University of Pennsylvania.Trending Stories
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