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S.F. Court Is Three Months Behind on Mailed Filings
Court CEO T. Michael Yuen acknowledges processing has "taken a hit" from layoffs.Retired Supreme Court Justice O'Connor says judges shouldn't be elected
Retired Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor said Wednesday that she'd do away with electing judges and make prosecutors and defense lawyers interchangeable as a way of improving the U.S. justice system.After 25 Years, Brobeck Attorney Makes Partner
Twenty-five years to partner? That may be unimaginable to young associates bemoaning the seven-year trek up the partnership ladder. But for Melinda Riechert, it's no big deal. After more than two decades in the trenches, Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison's first female litigator back in 1975 will join the San Francisco, Calif.-based firm's partnership ranks in January.Judge: Johnson ineligible to be on ballot
A state administrative law judge Monday ruled that Clarence Johnson, right photo, the lawyer running to unseat Fulton County Superior Court Judge D. Todd Markle, is ineligible to run because Johnson owes back taxes. Administrative law judge Michael Malihi, left, can be overruled by the secretary of state.Obama asks lawmakers to back stimulus bill
WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama and congressional Democrats sought to ease Republican complaints about a massive economic stimulus plan Friday, meeting with GOP leaders in the White House and promising to consider some of their recommendations.Many Republican lawmakers say the $825 billion package is too costly, and that too much of the spending is for long-range projects that will not stimulate the economy quickly.View more book results for the query "*"
The Other Guant�namo Terror Hearings
Those held at Guant�namo Bay as suspected enemy combatants were given the right to challenge their detentions by a June Supreme Court decision. Their lawyers say the process set up by the government to determine their status is a joke. A glimpse inside one hearing, involving a Kuwaiti detainee who has been held at the U.S. naval base in Guant�namo for nearly three years.Lawyers Weigh Options After Tobacco Award Slashed
Lawyers for a former TWA flight attendant who saw her $5.5 million secondhand smoke verdict decimated by a Miami-Dade judge say they're considering asking for a new trial on damages. On Friday, Circuit Judge Fredricka G. Smith reduced to $500,000 the award the former flight attendant had won after alleging the smoke to which she was subjected in her 27 years as a flight attendant left her with chronic sinusitis.Citigroup Inc. v. Wachovia Corp.
Citigroup's Lawsuit Over Failed Merger With Wachovia Remanded to State CourtTrending Stories
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