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December 02, 2008 |

For Climate Work, Firms Have High Expectations

A few years ago, clients asked Peter L. Gray if climate change was real. These days, the McKenna Long & Aldridge attorney in Washington fields questions about the business and law of climate change, not the science.
10 minute read
June 07, 2010 |

Associates: Career Development

In this Special Section from the New York Law Journal: "Acquiring Key Non-Legal Competencies," "Think Like a Client," "Rocky Diversity Road Requires Different Approach," "Pro Bono Skills Are Transferable," "Amplify Your Networking" and "It's Never Too Soon to Consider Your Public Reputation."
3 minute read
November 27, 2006 |

Full Disclosure

Congressional lawmakers dined while mixing and mingling with lobbyists in the Rayburn Office Building on Capitol Hill. Could this be a new lobbyist strategy for reaching out to members? Plus more news, notes, quotes, and what to do after dark...
5 minute read
December 30, 2010 |

U.S. companies lobby for tax holiday on offshore earnings

U.S. companies with overseas operation have been lobbying for a tax holiday on offshore earnings, but they're already finding plenty of ways to avoid taxes.
6 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book White Collar Crime: Business and Regulatory Offenses Authors: Otto G. Obermaier, Robert G. Morvillo (deceased), Robert J. Anello, Barry A. Bohrer View this Book

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February 14, 2006 |

Courthouses May Be Closed to Spy Claims

T.R. [email protected] Congress paralyzed by deep divisions over the legitimacy of the National Security Agency's domestic surveillance scheme, critics are hoping an alternate body might invalidate the program: the federal courts. It's hardly a given, however, that the courts will ever adjudicate the issue.
8 minute read
January 13, 2012 |

On the Move

A weekly report of lawyer moves and law firm changes. Keep abreast of where movers and shakers are going and what they're doing.
5 minute read
June 07, 2002 |

Retirement Rumor Mill Revs Up, Runs Out

For a few brief hours on June 5, the U.S. Supreme Court retirement rumor mill, idle since last summer, lurched into full-tilt production. The Arizona Republic Web site reported that speculation was increasing on Capitol Hill that Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist planned to retire as early as this summer. The report had special significance because of the newspaper`s contacts in the Arizona congressional delegation as well as its familiarity with Supreme Court justices who have called Arizona home: Re
8 minute read
August 09, 2006 |

How an Overachieving Law Professor Toppled the President's Terror Tribunals

Georgetown Law professor Neal Katyal had never argued before the Supreme Court, but in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld he literally took on George W. Bush, arguing that the military commissions the president established to try the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base detainees were illegal. The Court agreed. Some had called the case unwinnable. Others had tried to talk Katyal out of arguing it. "I enjoy figuring my way out of a maze," he says. "If somebody says we can't do x or y, I like figuring out a way to do x or y."
13 minute read
May 02, 2007 |

Judge Leaves Criminal Bench After Being Accused of 'Vile' Remark

Veteran Florida Judge Charles Greene asked to be re-assigned from the criminal bench Tuesday after he was accused of making a racially insensitive remark in his courtroom. In a letter to Broward County, Fla., Chief Judge Dale Ross on Monday, Broward County Public Defender Howard Finkelstein complained that Greene used the initials "NHI" -- meaning No Humans Involved -- to describe defendants and witnesses in an attempted murder case involving minorities.
5 minute read

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