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Best Practices for Corporate Internal Investigations
By now, the concept of Upjohn warnings should be familiar to any counsel, whether in-house or external, who is representing a corporation's interests in an internal investigation.Cantil-Sakauye to Get an Earful at Sit-Down with Judges
The chief justice has agreed to a three-hour closed-door meeting, moderated by the First District's J. Anthony Kline, with a group of presiding judges and ACJ representatives.Attorney-Client Privilege Doesn`t Cover All Communications
Although the attorney-client privilege in Pennsylvania cloaks all communications from a client to a lawyer, it doesn`t protect the lawyer`s communications with the client unless disclosure would risk exposing the client`s communication, a federal judge has ruled.Court won't hear challenge to Iowa judicial system
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court won't hear an appeal challenging the makeup of an Iowa commission that nominates the state's Supreme Court and Court of Appeals members.Avon buys Silpada for $650 million
Avon Products Inc., a direct seller of beauty products, agreed to buy Silpada Designs for at least $650 million in an effort to expand its jewelry business, the company said Monday.View more book results for the query "*"
Oil spill scrutiny turns to Obama administration
Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and other federal officials will come under questioning for what the government did - or did not do - to prevent the oil spill, and how they have responded since oil started streaming into the Gulf last month.Cross-Examination: A View from the Jury Box
New Jersey State Bar Association member Wanji Walcott, vice president and chief technology officers of American Express Co., talks about what it was like to serve as a juror on a criminal trial.New York Judge Rules Law Partner Not an Employee, Can't Sue for Age Discrimination
Post-Its and Paper Clips: How Low-Tech Prevailed in Patent Case
In a patent infringement case in federal court, Johnson & Johnson subsidiary Ethicon Endo-Surgery showed the jury a massive video screen filled with images of the device at issue -- a medical tool that removes tissue for biopsies. Worried that the oversized images would distort the jury's view of the device, attorney Jack Scarola constructed his own replica of the device using Post-it notes, paper clips and homegrown ingenuity. Call it low rent, but Scarola won $2 million for his client.Trending Stories
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