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Ruling could soften FCC's tough tactics
The Federal Communications Commission's bulldog approach to enforcing broadcast indecency rules may now be on a leash.Last week, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit threw out a $550,000 fine against CBS for televising a split-second view of Janet Jackson's breast during the 2004 Super Bowl Halftime Show.United States v. Robert Ike George
Statute's Provisoin Requires That Defendnat Give Known False Information in Passport ApplicationMorris, Manning Lures Lawyers Away From Holland & Knight
Meredith [email protected] Knight lawyers James "Mac" Hunter and Jason P. Wright have left the firm for Morris, Manning Martin. Hunter brings Bruce E.L.M. Strothers, a contract attorney, with him.The HK departures follow the firm's loss of four transactional partners and a commercial litigator-who was also the local managing partner-to Epstein Becker Green in early February.EEOC members move ahead with ambitious agenda
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has beefed up its staff and enforcement with a goal of bringing more high-impact workplace discrimination cases.Inadmissible: Whither John Edwards?; Plame Case Packs Courtroom; and More
John Edwards is one out-of-work lawyer looking for a job this holiday season; what the intelligence reform bill means for the FBI; a packed courtroom watches First Amendment guru tussle with judges in Plame case; and more.Fired Day Care Worker Can Pursue Civil Rights Action, Federal Judge Rules
A woman who claims she was fired from her position in a day care center for opposing a company policy of shunning male applicants can pursue a federal civil rights retaliation claim, a federal judge in New York held. The judge said a reasonable jury could conclude that Maura O'Shea was fired after her repeated run-ins with supervisors over Childtime Childcare's alleged policy of discriminating against male applicants.2nd Circuit Finds FCC's Policy on 'Fleeting Expletives' Arbitrary
The Federal Communications Commission did not provide sufficient justification for a policy change under which it planned to penalize the use of "fleeting expletives" on television, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Monday. The circuit found that the FCC acted "arbitrarily and capriciously" when it warned the Fox Network it intended to sanction it for obscenities uttered by Cher and Nicole Richie on televised awards shows.The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors of Cybergenics Corporation,
A creditors' committee may not assert fraudulent-transfer claims under 11 U.S.C. � 544 of the Bankruptcy Code; the plain language of � 544 and Hartford Underwriters, holding that an administrative claimant of a Chapter 7 bankruptcy estate does not have an independent right to bring suit under 11 U.S.C. � 506(c), allow only the trustee or debtor-in-possession to assert fraudulent-transfer claims, and a creditor or creditors' committee may not bring such avoidance actions derivatively; the dismissalTrending Stories
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