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Contractors Enjoy Expanded Whistle-Blower Protections
Peckar & Abramson attorney Ralf R. Rodriguez says there is a trend toward expanding whistle-blower protections by making it easier for employees to achieve whistle-blower status and by providing greater protections.Cochran Firm Expands With New S.F. Office
Partners at one of Southern California's most successful plaintiff shops have embarked on a novel business plan: They're opening Bay Area offices for a firm whose reputation is staked on one man. And they don't seem to mind that he died last month.This Week's Winners and Losers
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Court Denies Mother's Bid for Religious Exemption to Vaccinations
A woman who claimed she saw "God in everything" and feared immunizing her daughter because it would inject "disease" into her "perfect" and "divine" human form failed to establish religious grounds sufficient for an exemption from New York state's mandatory vaccination rules, a federal judge has ruled. Martina Caviezel, a self-proclaimed pantheist, sought a preliminary injunction allowing her to enroll her 4-year-old daughter in pre-kindergarten without getting the shots the state says the child needs.Corporate Negligence Theory Against Dental Provider Survives Early Test
A Lackawanna County judge has allowed a claim of corporate negligence in a dental malpractice action to proceed, permitting a woman to conduct discovery that will test the scope of landmark case law governing Pennsylvania corporate liability.Impeachment trial to proceed without Ill. governor
Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, taking his defense to television rather than his impeachment trial, lashed out at his accusers Monday and revealed he had considered naming Oprah Winfrey to the U.S. Senate. The embattled governor told ABC's "Good Morning America" that the idea of nominating the talk show host came to him as he explored potential candidates for the job that federal prosecutors allege he tried to sell to the highest bidder.Bushes Defend Miers Nomination as Conservatives, Public Remain Skeptical
While Senate Judiciary Chairman Arlen Specter announced Tuesday that questions for Harriet Miers' confirmation hearing will likely focus on her approach to constitutional issues, President Bush and the first lady offered a joint defense of the Supreme Court nominee in a bid to appease conservative supporters. Meanwhile, a new poll shows the public appears more concerned about Miers' close ties to the president and her lack of judicial experience than any ideological effect she would have on the Court.Trending Stories
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