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August 13, 2009 | New Jersey Law Journal

Unpublished Opinions

Unpublished state and federal court decisions.
62 minute read
April 28, 2008 | New York Law Journal

Price, petitioners/plaintiffs-appellants v. New York City Board of Education, respondents/defendants-respondents

Ban on Cell Phones in Schools Left in Force; Policy A Rational Response to Devices� Disruptive Potential
31 minute read
June 02, 2008 | National Law Journal

Did Affirmative Action Really Hinder Clarence Thomas?

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas blames Yale Law School -- specifically, its affirmative action program -- for his difficulties securing a job as a first-year associate after his graduation. He wrote in his autobiography that his degree was basically worthless, since it "bore the taint of racial preference." But interviews with a dozen African-American lawyers who attended Yale in the same years paint a strikingly different picture.
19 minute read
June 01, 2008 | The American Lawyer

Did Affirmative Action Really Hinder Clarence Thomas?

The Supreme Court Justice says racial preference made it impossible for him to find a law firm job. His black classmates tell a different story.
19 minute read
July 11, 2008 | New York Law Journal

TOA Construction Co. Inc., petitioner-appellant v. Tsitsires, respondent-respondent

Apartment Used Only as Mail Drop, Storage Space Should Not Be Treated as Tenant's Residence
54 minute read
January 28, 2010 | New York Law Journal

Weintraub v. Board of Education*

Free With Registration: Teacher Cannot Pursue First Amendment Claim Over Alleged Retaliation Against School
34 minute read
July 16, 2009 | New Jersey Law Journal

Unpublished Opinions

Unpublished state and federal court decisions.
43 minute read
November 08, 2007 | Corporate Counsel

Lean and Mean

Unless his conviction is overturned, former Qwest chief executive Joseph Nacchio will serve six years for insider trading. The verdict, says Troy Eid, the U.S. Attorney for Colorado, is justice served. Appointed to office just eight months before the trial began, Eid built a new team almost entirely from scratch to prosecute the case, including recruiting a former Enron prosecutor. "I want to debunk the notion that there is a playbook that Justice developed," Eid says. "We had to make up our own strategy."
20 minute read
June 14, 2004 | The Legal Intelligencer

State Court Rulings

Attorney General Candidates Endorsed Harrisburg Jim Eisenhower, the Democratic candidate for state attorney general, got a boost on June 2 from his former foes in the primary election. The Philadelphia attorney received endorsements from ...
20 minute read
November 01, 2007 | Corporate Counsel

What's Behind the Drop in Corporate Fraud Indictments?

The Justice Department's Corporate Fraud Task Force record is a long litany of achievements punctuated by disappointment and controversy. From case records and statistics, as well as interviews with prosecutors, task force members and defense lawyers, The American Lawyer derived a detailed portrait of corporate fraud prosecutions over the last five years. Perhaps the most curious of the findings is the precipitous decline in major corporate fraud indictments since the re-election of President Bush.
22 minute read

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