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October 24, 2008 | New York Law Journal

Jagger Fails To Prove City Apartment Is Primary Home

10 minute read
July 11, 2013 | The Recorder

United States v. Green

4 minute read
March 21, 2005 | New York Law Journal

Matter of J.U. v. C.K.

Court Declines to Adjudicate Domestic Violence Case That Occurred in California
1 minute read
August 01, 2010 | Corporate Counsel

Cracks in the Great Wall

GE's lawyers talk about their company's own experience with labor strife in China.
5 minute read
December 23, 2010 | New Jersey Law Journal

This Week in Law Journal History

Law Journal stories throughout the past century.
3 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Pennsylvania Causes of Action, 12th Edition Authors: GAETAN J. ALFANO, RONALD J. SHAFFER, JOSHUA C. COHAN View this Book

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December 16, 2010 | The Recorder

Cooley Lawyers Advise Cypress Bioscience in Acquisition

2 minute read
March 18, 2013 | Daily Report Online

E-discovery vendors are strong partners

As competition among service providers and law firms heats up, cooperation remains the key to a successful e-discovery engagement.
4 minute read
March 12, 2007 | National Law Journal

Equal-opportunity offensiveness

An ex-associate's lawsuit against New York's Sullivan & Cromwell for alleged anti-gay bias has resonated for some former colleagues- and other offbeat items.
3 minute read
January 30, 2007 | New Jersey Law Journal

Former Patient Recovers $3.75M From Teen Clinic Closed for Abusive Means

A former patient of a clinic for troubled adolescents, which closed in 1998 after an administrative law judge found evidence of a regimen that included beatings, strip searches and sleep deprivation, will receive $3.75 million from the clinic and a staff psychiatrist.
4 minute read
September 15, 2008 | New York Law Journal

Insurance Coverage

Lorelie S. Masters and Matthew L. Jacobs, partners at Jenner & Block, and Nicholas O. Stephanopoulos, an associate at the firm, write that as with any new category of lawsuits, global-warming litigation raises the question of whether corporate liability insurance will cover the losses. A review of the potentially applicable policies demonstrates that the answer is "yes." Why should this one kind of litigation be barred from coverage when the general rule is that companies' liabilities arising from normal business operations are covered? Nevertheless, insurers have begun to argue that the so-called "pollution exclusion" precludes coverage for liability related to climate change.
8 minute read

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