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February 19, 2010 | New York Law Journal

Ruling Affirms Arbitrator's Authority in Transit Case

9 minute read
July 08, 2013 | Commercial Litigation Insider

Q&A: Gregory Arenson

Gregory Arenson, a partner who specializes in commercial litigation handling antitrust and securities cases at Kaplan Fox & Kilsheimer, assumed the chair of the New York State Bar Association's Commercial & Federal Litigation Section on June 1. His role is to facilitate the work of the Section committees through CLE, reports and articles, expand the use of electronic and social media to promote communication throughout the Section and encourage new members and volunteers. Arenson will preside over the chair during the Section's 25th year, an event for which marking the occasion will be held later this year.
12 minute read
August 29, 2005 | New Jersey Law Journal

Unpublished Opinions

Unpublished state and federal court opinions.
24 minute read
January 03, 2013 | New York Law Journal

Pet Issues Revisited: Questions Raised on Support Pets

In their Cooperatives and Condominiums column, Richard Siegler and Eva Talel of Stroock & Stroock & Lavan write: While boards have little difficulty granting waivers of "no-pet" rules to blind individuals who require seeing-eye service dogs, boards do not always know how to respond to owners who claim to have impairments or conditions that require a pet in order to enjoy the use of their apartment. Further, courts and administrative tribunals have given conflicting messages as to what an owner must establish in order to keep a support pet.
14 minute read
May 05, 2003 | New Jersey Law Journal

Banco Popular North America v. Gandi et al,

When viewed under the indulgent standards of Printing Mart v. Sharp Electronics, plaintiff's allegation that defendant-attorney advised a client who was indebted to plaintiff to transfer his assets to his wife to defeat the rights of his creditors and assisted in the transfer by preparing the deeds contained a fundament of a claim for creditor fraud, and plaintiff's allegations of creditor fraud, civil conspiracy, and his claim against defendant's law firm and partners are reinstated; however, the
11 minute read
December 20, 2002 | Law.com

Free Speech, on the Cheap

Lawrence J. Siskind tells us that "freedom of speech" has become the first refuge of a scoundrel. Meet Amiri Baraka, Tom Paulin and Lynne Stewart. Not only does each spout unpopular views, all enjoy a special perch from which to spew those views. And, when his or her right to receive special treatment is challenged, each indignantly invokes freedom of speech. The fact that anyone takes their complaints seriously teaches us much about the true nature of freedom of speech.
10 minute read
September 17, 2007 | Daily Report Online

The power of climate change

UNLIKE SOME OF HIS COUNTERPARTS in the corporate world, David Ratcliffe, the chief executive officer of Southern Co., has not attempted to jump feet first out of the smoke emanating from his company's more than 200 coal, oil and gas generating units and into the warm green haze of the global climate change movement.He's certainly careful to detail Southern Co.
17 minute read
November 04, 2002 | New Jersey Law Journal

Paralyzed UPS Worker's Suit Settles For $4.1 Million in Bergen County

8 minute read
November 11, 2002 | Texas Lawyer

Criminal Defendants Hobbled by Hobbs Act

The great divide over the federalization of violent crimes grew larger at the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals with the release of an evenly split en banc opinion affirming the conviction of a man sentenced to 97 years in prison for armed robbery. The man had argued that federal officials overstepped their bounds by using the Hobbs Act, a federal law aimed at criminals who interfere with interstate commerce, to prosecute him.
6 minute read
May 11, 2007 | Law.com

The Culture Gap

So many countries, so many rules for attorneys to follow. The way attorneys exchange business cards or conduct meetings can differ from country to country. Globalization of the legal world has led more lawyers to travel overseas, so grasping another country's customs can make or break a lawyer's deal. And though a number of large law firms are adding cross-cultural training of some sort, others say there are more important ways to serve clients, and they simply try to practice cultural sensitivity.
8 minute read

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