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November 22, 2006 | Law.com

Disbarred Attorney and Wife Shot While Driving Home in N.Y.

Peggy Perez-Olivo, who lives three doors down from former President Clinton in Chappaqua, N.Y., died Monday after a mysterious shooting on an isolated road that left her husband, Carlos, wounded. No arrests have been made. Police say they cannot say whether the shooting was a random attack or connected to Carlos Perez-Olivo's work as a criminal defense attorney. He practiced law in New York from 1980 until he was disbarred in August for repeatedly refusing to "return unearned funds or retainers to clients."
3 minute read
August 07, 2003 | The Legal Intelligencer

Permitted But Unauthorized Use of Trademarks

A common fallacy among trademark owners is that they possess the absolute right to control all uses of their marks. Trademark law prescribes certain boundaries regarding the nature and scope of a trademark owner's rights. In certain instances, an entity legally may use a trademark owned by a third party to refer to the mark as a source identifier without authorization from the trademark owner.
12 minute read
August 20, 2002 | Law.com

Jury Verdicts

13 minute read
December 23, 2011 | The American Lawyer

The Global Lawyer: The Global Lawyer of the Year

6 minute read
October 04, 2012 | The Recorder

Climate Change Tort Litigation

Recent attempts to hold energy companies liable for damages from GHGs have been unsuccessful, but unresolved issues remain, explain Shook, Hardy & Bacon attorneys.
9 minute read
September 05, 2000 | Law.com

Drowning in the Merger Wave

After years of record-breaking merger activity, the deluge of deals is wearing on the Federal Trade Commission. Bogged down with reviewing seemingly endless corporate unions, FTC lawyers have been hard pressed to prosecute antitrust violations, such as price fixing and abuse of monopoly power. Now, FTC attorneys fear that counsel are urging clients to use this institutional weakness to their advantage.
10 minute read
May 30, 2003 | Daily Report Online

Power Grab: Southern's 'Bama Firm Invades Ga.

R. Robin [email protected] a roster of power company clients and a host of influential political connections, Alabama's Balch Bingham is merging with Atlanta's Meadows, Ichter Bowers. The merger promises to create Atlanta's first purely Republican powerhouse law firm and has the potential to threaten Troutman Sanders' lock on its most significant clients, the Southern Co.
13 minute read
February 11, 2011 | Legaltech News

Redress Cyberbullying as an Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress

Until New York legislates a private right of action to redress cyberbullying, personal injury lawyers will likely rely on the intentional infliction of emotional distress. Attorneys Andrew Kaufman and Betsy Baydala examine how this tort and other civil theories apply to cyberbullies in the state.
11 minute read
March 22, 2000 | Law.com

Where The Action Is

14 minute read
October 26, 2012 | Daily Business Review

Justice Samuel Alito's recusals from business cases pique interest

Recusals by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito Jr. in three key business cases have left court watchers wondering what's up.
4 minute read

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