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April 08, 2013 | The Legal Intelligencer

Third-Party Claims and Workers' Comp On Monday's The American Law Journal

How can a lawyer miss a third-party claim in a workers' comp matter? According to one judge, it happens more than you may think.
2 minute read
February 22, 2002 | Law.com

DNA Data Bank Boost Proposed in Connecticut

As part of an effort to enhance Connecticut's DNA data bank, a proposed amendment to a state trial and post-conviction statute could expand the list of offenses for which convicts are required to submit blood samples prior to their release from prison. The proposed amendment would require people convicted of -- among other felony offenses -- murder, kidnapping and assault to submit blood samples to a statewide DNA data bank.
3 minute read
September 23, 2009 | The Legal Intelligencer

The Right to Know and the Constitutional Right to Privacy

Last month, when the Commonwealth Court issued its first published opinion addressing Pennsylvania's new Right-to-Know Law, it shone a bright light on a long-standing issue: the inherent tension between the public's right to access government records and a person's interest in the privacy of information that the government possesses about him.
9 minute read
July 30, 2002 | Law.com

Stress Related to High Expectations Ruled Not a 'Disability' Under ADA

In this time of corporate downsizing, employees who remain in their jobs are inevitably asked to do "more with less." The 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals' ruling in Carroll v. Xerox Corp.is part of an apparent trend among courts to keep the bar high in defining "disabilities" in the workplace, particularly when the employee claims to be disabled because of stress in the workplace.
5 minute read
June 04, 2008 | The Legal Intelligencer

Judge lifts injunction on 3 of 5 Philadelphia gun laws

A judge has lifted an injunction on three of five gun laws passed by Philadelphia.
1 minute read
May 01, 2007 | The Legal Intelligencer

Suspicion of Client-Coaching Forces Reopening of Deposition

A city Commerce Court judge has ordered reopened the deposition of a corporate vice president in a $51 million wholesale pharmaceuticals dispute after finding there is reasonable suspicion that counsel for the executive's company coached the man during breaks in that original deposition.
7 minute read
January 14, 2005 | New York Law Journal

'Lawyer's Lawyer' Takes Top Legal Post at NYPD

4 minute read
August 03, 2010 | The Legal Intelligencer

Scholars Defend, Dispute Shale Economic Development Figures

A recent update of a Penn State study, "Economic Impacts of Marcellus Shale" captured the breadth of the economic development from drilling in the shale.
3 minute read
November 18, 2008 | New Jersey Law Journal

State v. Stull

The testimony of witnesses and reasonable inferences from the record as a whole were sufficient to support a finding that defendant caused physical pain adequate to establish bodily injury for a conviction of simple assault.
4 minute read

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