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Wolf Block, Akerman Senterfitt Merger Talks Stall
Merger talks between Wolf Block and Florida-based Akerman Senterfitt have hit a snag, according to a statement Wednesday by leadership at the two firms.Unseen Crash Not Abnormal Working Condition
A tractor-trailer driver who claimed he suffered post-traumatic stress disorder when a set of wheels fell off his truck and struck a state police car, severely injuring the trooper inside, did not demonstrate the accident constituted abnormal working condAttorney general: 911 calls available to public
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) ? The attorney general has concluded that the Whitley County 911 dispatching center violated the Kentucky open records act by refusing to publicly release 911 calls.View more book results for the query "*"
Dinsmore Grabs Four Thorp Reed Partners
Four partners in the toxic torts practice of Pittsburgh-based Thorp Reed & Armstrong will be leaving the firm for former merger candidate Dinsmore & Shohl. Offers have also been made to associates in Thorp Reed's complex civil litigation practice to make the same shift. The 300-attorney Dinsmore & Shohl, based in Cincinnati, ranked 190th in the most recent Am Law 200 rankings.Bank of America posts lower profit on Merrill legal costs
Bank of America Corp. said third-quarter profit dropped 95 percent on litigation expenses and an accounting charge tied to the firm's debt. Net income fell to $340 million, or 0 cents a diluted share, from $6.2 billion, or 56 cents, a year earlier. The shares were little changed in early trading.Team took off the gloves defending Chevron
Lawyers at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher turned to an often ignored section of U.S. law to obtain depositions, documents and outtakes of a documentary film in an effort to prove that environmental contamination claims brought in Ecuador against their client, Chevron Corp., are fraudulent.High Court Lets Defamation Suit Against New York Times Proceed
The Supreme Court refused Monday to block a defamation lawsuit against The New York Times over columns about the still-unsolved mailing of anthrax-laced letters that killed five people and sickened 17 not long after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks. A federal judge had thrown out Steven Hatfill's suit against the newspaper over columns that faulted the FBI for failing to thoroughly investigate the ex-Army scientist, but the 4th Circuit reinstated the suit.Judge Approves $600 Mil. Settlement in Countrywide Case
A federal judge in Los Angeles has approved a $601.5 million class action settlement between Countrywide Financial Corp. and its shareholders -- the largest securities agreement to come out of the housing crisis.Trending Stories
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