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August 07, 2007 | Law.com

In Camera

SEC attorneys are sitting ringside at ex-Brocade CEO's backdating trial ... Marlon Brando's will may qualify as interesting enough to shield a TV show from a lawsuit ... S.F. lawyers and Idaho judge don't see eye to eye on pronouns, but agree on the bigger picture ... Jerry Brown wasn't the first AG to get a bee in his bonnet over local responsibility to plan ahead for greenhouse gas emissions.
8 minute read
October 21, 2004 | Daily Report Online

Lawyers Massing in Battleground States

Lily [email protected] W. Siehl isn't sitting this one out. Four years ago, during the most hotly contested presidential election in history, Siehl was in the hub of the action on Election Day-right in the middle of Florida. The problem was that Siehl, a Republican lawyer from Columbus, Ohio, was in Florida tending to a client, not battling Democrats.
11 minute read
April 07, 2011 | The Legal Intelligencer

Tips on Developing and Implementing a Mentor-Protege Program

Partners in law firms of all sizes and specialties are able to articulate the benefits derived as a result of implementing mentor-protege programs as part of a firmwide career development initiative. However, for a variety of reasons, in the majority of firms, mentor-protege programs have not been implemented with success.
9 minute read
October 10, 2012 | New York Law Journal

Financial Stability Oversight Counsel

In his Domestic Banking column, Clyde Mitchell, an adjunct professor of banking law at Fordham University School of Law, writes that the oversight council created under Dodd-Frank's main strength is getting all of our financial services regulators together under one roof and forcing them to take on tough issues.
11 minute read
August 09, 2010 | Law.com

Internet Sale Ruled to Trigger Personal Jurisdiction in Long-Arm Law

A trademark infringement action can be brought against an out-of-state employee of an online retailer who sent a bogus handbag to a Bronx, N.Y., address from a website that offered merchandise to New York consumers, a federal appeals court has ruled. Simone Ubaldelli, a California resident and principal of the now-bankrupt Queen Bee of Beverly Hills, contended that the fashion company Chlo� could not sue him in New York based on the one-time Internet-based sale of the fake designer purse.
4 minute read
September 17, 2007 | Law.com

Reed Smith Snags Partners for Chicago Push

Reed Smith has bagged five new partners for its Chicago arm, including taking two partners from the head office of rival Mayer Brown. The hires are the latest in a string of partner-level appointments for Reed Smith in Chicago, with the national law firm having brought in nine new partners in the last five months.
2 minute read
October 21, 2002 | Texas Lawyer

Inadmissible

6 minute read
May 20, 2009 | New York Law Journal

The Rankings, Deconstructed and Examined

Richard D. Geiger, associate dean of enrollment and communications at Cornell Law School, writes: Whether a school openly embraces the ranking of law schools or publicly decries it while working feverishly behind the scenes to climb above its peers, no one can credibly dispute that rankings are now fully ingrained as part of law school operations and culture. What connection the criteria used in those rankings has to the sensible goal of holding law schools to high standards is another question.
10 minute read
January 07, 2002 | Law.com

In Rare Move, Georgia Judge OKs Deposition of Home Depot Chairman

A Georgia judge is allowing lawyers pursuing a personal injury suit against Atlanta-based The Home Depot Inc. to depose company co-founder and Chairman Bernard Marcus. Plaintiff Nancy Martin, who was injured when merchandise from a Home Depot shelf fell on her, claims Marcus helped create the marketing plan that produced Home Depot's policy of displaying products in towering stacks.
6 minute read
December 30, 2010 | New York Law Journal

Panel Orders Hearing Into Fraud Claims From 1985 Divorce

Confronted with conflicting claims that a divorce judgment was procured by fraud, an appeals panel in Manhattan has ruled that a hearing must be held to determine whether the husband or wife is the guilty party. This is a "remarkable case" in which "certainly" one of the parties is lying and "possibly, but implausibly, both are lying," Justice James M. McGuire wrote in a concurring opinion.
5 minute read

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