0 results for 'White Case'
Ex-Associates Fill Void in Human Rights Work
Six years ago, Roger Normand, Chris Jochnick and Sarah Zaidi founded the Center for Economic and Social Rights, or CESR, to address what they perceived to be a critical "void of action" in the human rights movement. The three, all 34 years old now, first worked together in 1991, organizing fact-finding missions to post-Gulf War Iraq, while attending graduate school at Harvard: Jochnick in law, Zaidi in public health and Normand in law and divinity.Former Qwest Chief in Court for Indictment on Insider Trading Charges
In a triumph for federal prosecutors, former Qwest Communications CEO Joseph Nacchio was indicted Tuesday on 42 counts of insider trading accusing him of illegally selling off $101 million in stock after privately learning the company might not meet its financial goals. Nacchio, 56, appeared in court a few hours after the indictment was announced and pleaded not guilty before being led away in handcuffs.View more book results for the query "White Case"
Intellectual Ventures Deploys In-House D.C. Lobbyist
Intellectual Ventures Management, which its critics consider one of the largest U.S. "patent trolls," has deployed its first in-house lobbyist in Washington, D.C.The Bush Judicial Legacy, by the Numbers
The new issue of Judicature offers the most comprehensive empirical look yet at former President George W. Bush's judicial legacy. Through 59 confirmed appointments to appeals courts, 261 to district courts and two to the Supreme Court, the Bush administration "definitely achieved" a goal of moving the federal bench to the right, says one editor. Tallying 2,680 decisions by Bush-appointed district court judges, a political scientist concludes "the Bush team is on the whole the most conservative on record."How to Win Prosecutors and Influence Justice
The audience for a panel discussion held at the ABA's 2002 national convention learned lessons on how to avoid indictment when the government starts nosing around. Find out what DOJ Deputy Assistant Attorney General Alice Fisher divulged about her agency's internal guidelines for deciding whether to file an indictment and what companies can do to appease prosecutors.Commentary: Commission on Judicial Conduct Owes Justice Hecht an Apology
The state Commission on Judicial Conduct's admonition of Texas Supreme Court Justice Nathan Hecht is legally unsound and reflects how utterly oblivious commission members seem to be to public attitudes regarding the judiciary, says Lonny Hoffman of the University of Houston.Trending Stories
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