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February 12, 2007 | National Law Journal

ANTITRUST | 9th Cir. tackles natural gas price-fixing

With billions of dollars riding on the outcome, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is expected to define the scope of federal regulatory power and the ability of private litigants to recover antitrust damages in the deregulated world of natural gas selling.
4 minute read
March 29, 2010 | Law.com

Ruden McClosky Faces Miami Exodus as Four Partners Decamp

In another blow to struggling Ruden McClosky, four partners in the Miami office are leaving at the end of the month, including prominent attorney Larry Gordich, chair of the firm's lucrative bankruptcy and creditors' rights practice. The departures leave the Miami office with just six attorneys, including one of counsel and one who spends much of his time in Tampa, Fla. At its height, the office had up to 30 lawyers. The Fort Lauderdale, Fla.-based firm also laid off 20 secretaries and support staff within the last month.
3 minute read
April 04, 2005 | Texas Lawyer

Working to Stave Off the Crisis From Within

Whatever the shape of the relationship that ultimately emerges between in-house and outside counsel, these are matters that need to have been thoroughly discussed and agreed upon before a crisis situation erupts to preempt confusion and internal dissension during times of tumult and external pressure.
13 minute read
July 24, 2006 | New York Law Journal

Absent Contract, Funeral Parlor Owner Denied Compensation for Photographs

4 minute read
April 03, 2013 | Daily Report Online

Alston & Bird, Kirkland join raft of firms circling potential Dell deal

The takeover battle for Dell Inc. may not have yet reached the level of Wall Street legend, but the proposed $24.4 billion leveraged buyout for the company has drawn in enough high-powered lawyers to make a small screen drama.
7 minute read
February 09, 2004 | New Jersey Law Journal

New York SMSA Ltd. v. Mendham Township Zoning Board of Adjustment et al,

Applying the appropriate de novo standard of review, plaintiff-wireless communications service providers have clearly and convincingly demonstrated that: there is a significant gap in service in the township, they have made diligent, good-faith efforts to investigate all reasonable alternate technologies and sites which may be less intrusive in the community, their proposal to construct a single telecommunications tower, sufficient to serve all of them, on a residential property in the township would fil
16 minute read
June 13, 2003 | Daily Report Online

N.Y. Democrat Proposes 11th Circuit's Marcus for High Court

Jonathan [email protected] Stanley Marcus of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals may have what it takes to sail through the confirmation process to become the next justice on the U.S. Supreme Court, according to a leading Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee.Sen. Charles E. Schumer of New York this week put Marcus on a list of five potential nominees he suggested in a letter to President Bush.
4 minute read
November 30, 2004 | The Legal Intelligencer

Commerce Bank Hires Blank Rome Partner as First GC

With expansion plans moving full steam ahead, Commerce Bancorp chairman and president Vernon W. Hill decided the growing Cherry Hill-based bank finally needed a legal department with a general counsel. So he turned to one of the bank's primary outside law firms, Blank Rome, to tap longtime partner Alexander Bono to fill the newly created position.
5 minute read
November 16, 2004 | The Legal Intelligencer

Ten Years After

David B. Pudlin and William T. Hangley both vividly remember the day they realized they would no longer be able to practice law with their longtime colleagues at Hangley Connolly Epstein Chicco Foxman & Ewing.
9 minute read
May 06, 2009 | National Law Journal

Souter's Timing: Was it Age or Politics?

Supreme Court Justice David Souter, when asked if he would have retired now if Republican presidential candidate John McCain had been elected last November instead of Barack Obama, reportedly said that he "probably" would. With that answer, Souter does not directly refute commentary that he waited to retire until a president more to his liking than George W. Bush would be in a position to replace him. One expert identifies Souter as "a prime example" of justices who time their retirements for strategic reasons.
3 minute read

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