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April 06, 2010 | The Recorder

U.S. Supreme Court to Hear Non-Autism Vaccine Case

Kellogg, Huber partner David Frederick, who defeated Wyeth in a drug pre-emption case last year, will argue against the pharmaceutical company again this fall at the Supreme Court.
4 minute read
August 26, 2013 | Corporate Counsel

Lessig Sues Over Threat Arising From YouTube Video

Harvard Law School professor Lawrence Lessig has gone to court seeking clarification that his use of copyrighted music in an amateur dance video illustrating one of his lectures on YouTube constitutes fair use.
3 minute read
August 23, 2013 | Law.com

Lessig Sues Over Threat Arising From His YouTube Video

Harvard Law School professor Lawrence Lessig has gone to court seeking clarification that his use of copyrighted music in an amateur dance video illustrating one of his lectures on YouTube constitutes fair use.
3 minute read
February 24, 1999 | Law.com

Whatever Happened To Good Will Hunter?

Will Hunter was a small-town lawyer with a big-town resume -- a charismatic Harvard Law school grad who opted for a practice in rural Vermont. He didn't like to turn down a case, even when a client couldn't pay. But then came a dizzying ethical tailspin and charges of fraud. Was this the same idealist The American Lawyer Editor at Large John Morris knew in law school?
27 minute read
December 23, 1999 | Law.com

Legal Issues in Telemedicine and Healthcare E-Commerce

From the comfort of her home, a new mother can now order diapers and baby formula for home delivery through an Internet 'online pharmacy.' 'Ask the doctor' style Web sites now provide numerous health-related services and are the darlings of Wall Street. Meanwhile, legislatures, courts, and members of the bar are struggling to address the myriad legal issues posed by this new wave of telemedicine and healthcare e-commerce activity. This article attempts to address some of these issues.
16 minute read
December 13, 1999 | Law.com

Small-Town Lawyer, Big-Time Crime

Coolidge, Ga., population 700, was the nexus of what U.S. Customs agents call the largest non-drug money-laundering operation they've ever investigated. For almost two years, a venture-capital scam housed there fleeced millions from would-be investors, funneling the money to an offshore bank, agents say. Coolidge is an unlikely place for such dealings. Just as unlikely is one of the scam's principals: a small-town lawyer facing 20 years in federal prison after pleading guilty to a money-laundering charge.
18 minute read
August 29, 2005 | Law.com

Taking Stock of 'Grokster'

The Internet industry has had some time to sit back and examine the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studio v. Grokster, pondering its true meaning and its impact on technology and software developers as well as the entertainment field. In this roundtable discussion, members of Internet Law & Strategy's Board of Editors and other Internet law experts add their own perspectives on the implications of Grokster.
28 minute read
April 20, 2012 | New York Law Journal

Clemency: Justice to the Nth Degree

Ken Strutin, director of legal information services at the New York State Defenders Association, writes: 'Clemency (mercy), pardon (absolution), commutation (substitution), amnesty (forgetting), and reprieve (suspension) are drawn from the language of compassion. And today, they operate in a scheme of constitutional rights that overarches and subsumes notions of mercy and leniency.'
11 minute read
December 06, 2006 | Law.com

Where Will the Troubles End for Sonsini and HP?

Wilson Sonsini Chairman Larry Sonsini, who has plotted his career and his law firm's path to dominance with the precision and focus of a master, found himself this year in a place he never expected to be: testifying before Congress on his role as outside counsel to Hewlett-Packard, caught up in a boardroom spying scandal. Sonsini and his firm have faced criticism before -- over alleged conflicts and investments in client stock -- but now they face a crisis that might not blow over.
26 minute read
July 23, 2013 | The American Lawyer

Meet Robert Khuzami, Kirkland's New $5 Million Man

Kirkland & Ellis made the latest in a string of major lateral hires Tuesday, announcing that Robert Khuzami, the SEC's former head of enforcement, has joined the firm as partner in the government, regulatory, and internal investigations practice in New York and Washington, D.C. Joining Khuzami is Kenneth Lench, who stepped down last week as head of the enforcement division's structured and new products unit.
13 minute read

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