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January 29, 2007 | National Law Journal

MOVERS

Geraldine Ferraro has joined Blank Rome's government relations practice in Washington as a principal of the firm. A former Democratic vice-presidential nominee, Ferraro most recently was managing director of Global Consulting Group.
6 minute read
March 01, 2010 | Daily Business Review

An 85-year-old sculptor vs. the government

Korean War memorial creator sues government after his artwork was used for popular stamp.
4 minute read
September 07, 2007 | The Legal Intelligencer

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS

EventThe Legal Marketing Association, Metropolitan Philadelphia Chapter will hold MBA Day Camp, on Thursday, Sept. 20 - a full-day MBA crash course.
2 minute read
January 12, 2009 | National Law Journal

Civil Actions

3 minute read
January 02, 2012 | The American Lawyer

No Holiday Respite for Lawyers Working on Howrey Bankruptcy

5 minute read
January 17, 2005 | National Law Journal

HUD liable for violating the Fair Housing Act

After a decade of litigation, a federal judge in Baltimore has ruled that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is on the hook for violations of the Fair Housing Act by concentrating public housing in poor urban areas.
5 minute read
December 05, 2005 | National Law Journal

Fighting On: Sitcov Lawsuit Seeks to Force D.C. Bar to Erase Suspension From Record

Despite the D.C. Court of Appeals' view that a suspension from the bar for failure to pay dues is merely a minor infraction, Michael Sitcov is forging ahead with a lawsuit to force the D.C. Bar to erase his suspension from his record.
2 minute read
March 01, 2010 | Law.com

85-Year-Old Sculptor Prevails in Copyright Case Against Government

Frank Gaylord, now 85, won a government-sponsored contest to sculpt a memorial to Korean War veterans in Washington, D.C. in 1990. In 1995, John Alli took hundreds of photographs of the memorial on a snowy day and eventually produced a single, haunting photo. In 2002, the federal government paid Alli $1,500 to use his photo as the basis for a 37-cent postage stamp. Gaylord, who essentially got nothing along the way, sued for copyright infringement. On Thursday the Federal Circuit ruled in Gaylord's favor.
5 minute read
November 12, 2007 | National Law Journal

With Garnish: Paley Rothman Can Garnish Wages of Benson Fischer

The D.C. Court of Appeals ruled last week that Paley Rothman can garnish the wages of Benson Fischer after the firm won nearly $1 million on counterclaims that Fischer had engaged in bad-faith litigation against the firm and a client.
2 minute read
November 18, 2009 | Texas Lawyer

Opinion: Venue Shopping in Patent Cases Must Stop

There is nearly universal agreement that reform of the U.S. patent system is urgently needed. But patent reform has many elements, with just as many players lined up on various sides of the debate: pharmaceutical companies versus high-tech, big corporations versus small inventors. Some want to preserve strong patent rights, while others maintain such rights weaken, rather than foster, innovation. For some, speed and transparency are key.
6 minute read

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