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Daebo Int'l Shipping v. Americas Bulk Transport (BVI)
Alter Egos Dismissed From Second Amended Complaint Properly Naming PlaintiffAssessment of Interpreter Fees by the Court
Notice to the bar.N.Y. Law Firm Makes Bells Toll for Toll Booths
Sometimes 75 cents is all it takes to get an attorney in a fighting mood. For years, Michael Powers, a partner with 170-attorney Phillips Lytle in Buffalo, N.Y., said that he had been offended by the toll booth on Interstate Highway 190, which charged 75 cents to motorists entering the city. When a local businessman came to him and asked him if there was a legal basis to challenge the toll booths, Powers took the case. And the firm decided to cover 75 percent of the expenses on behalf of the community.View more book results for the query "*"
DA Hallinan Dissed in Cop Dismissal Motion
Defense lawyers for San Francisco police brass indicted on conspiracy charges argued Monday that the case is the result of a grand jury process guided by illegal evidence, conjecture, mismanagement and a failure to instruct jury members on the legal definition of conspiracy. The lawyers say District Attorney Terence Hallinan never even provided the grand jury with a definition of conspiracy, making it "highly likely" that the five officers were indicted on something less than probable cause.Feds Offer Warnings on the Dark Side of Domain Name Expansion
Protests about the pending expansion of top-level domain names have picked up as the rollout date approaches, with Commerce Department officials expressing concerns about program specifics.New York State Crime Victims Board v. Harris
Court Did Not Err in Enjoining Prisoner's Access Of Guardian Funds Until Victims? Claims ResolvedCongress's Sentence Irks Judges
The amendment, named for its sponsor, Representative Tom Feeney (R-Florida), was quickly enacted last April without hearings and without input from the Judicial Conference of the United States, the policy-making arm of the federal judiciary. Supporters claimed the law was necessary because judges were increasingly setting sentences below ranges specified by the U.S. Sentencing Commission. The rate of so-called downward departures in federal criminal cases rose from 5.8 percent in 1981 to 18.3 percent in 200Trending Stories
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