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Will Fire Sharers Face the Music?
The Supreme Court appeared wary Tuesday of punishing peer-to-peer downloading services like Grokster for copyright violation, in spite of arguments by a lawyer for the recording and movie industries that they amount to "a gigantic infringement machine." An hour of spirited oral arguments in the case MGM Studios Inc. v. Grokster Ltd. played out before a courtroom packed with intellectual property lawyers and entertainment industry representatives.Three disbarred, seven punished in latest Bar discipline report
Three South Florida lawyers have been disbarred and seven others received lesser punishment from the Florida Supreme Court.Man Formerly On SC Death Row Suing Prosecutors
A man condemned for decades to South Carolina's death row says prosecutors wrongfully pursued a case against him in a widow's 1982 stabbing death, according to a federal lawsuit.View more book results for the query "*"
Judge: No Suits on Friday -- Dress Suits, That Is
Superior Court Judge Mark Anthony Scott has declared his courtroom "business casual" on Fridays, meaning men don't have to don a tie or jacket during hearings and pleadings held during humid Georgia summers. While some local judges expressed surprise and skepticism about the new policy, Scott said there would be safeguards against "poor dress." The relaxed standards also apply to women, but Scott added with a smile, "no Daisy Duke attire, please."$5 million legal malpractice award upheld against Bryan Cave
A state judge has upheld a $5.1 million verdict against Bryan Cave and one of its former attorneys in a nearly decade-long malpractice case over a botched deal between partners in a women's apparel company.In the June 3 decision in Feinberg v. Boros, 108498/03, Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Barbara Jaffe refused to set aside the verdict, which was handed down by a jury last fall against Bryan Cave and retired attorney Jerome C.Report Urges Sweeping Changes for Pa. Juvenile Courts, Judicial Conduct Board
A commission charged with reviewing the Luzerne County, Pa., judicial corruption scandal released a final report Thursday, recommending scores of new procedures to protect juveniles who appear in the state's delinquency courts and to increase judicial accountability. Most notable, however, may be a recommendation that was not made; the Interbranch Commission on Juvenile Justice chose not to back the often recited and highly publicized recommendation of making juvenile delinquency proceedings open to the public.Trending Stories
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