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November 15, 2010 | Daily Report Online

Sugarland settles suit

Jennifer Nettles of Sugarland in 2006 sang, "I ain't settling for anything less than everything," but on Friday she and bandmate Kristian Bush settled a lawsuit brought by the group's founder, Kristen Hall. U.S. District Judge Timothy C. Batten Sr. signed an order saying the parties had notified him of the deal.
2 minute read
May 11, 2011 | New York Law Journal

Chen-Oster v. Goldman, Sachs & Co.

Court Explains Refusal to Stay Title VII Class Action Against Goldman Sachs
2 minute read
December 15, 2010 | New York Law Journal

Judge Faults 'Inventory' Search, Suppresses Gun Found in Car Trunk

4 minute read
April 14, 2008 | New Jersey Law Journal

Daily Decision Service Alert: Vol. 16, No. 72 - April 14, 2008

12 minute read
July 26, 2013 | New Jersey Law Journal

The Bar Report

Articles by and about the State Bar Association.
1 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book New Jersey Business Litigation 2025 Authors: Paul A. Rowe, Andrea J. Sullivan View this Book

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July 15, 2013 | The Legal Intelligencer

Proposed Spray-Foam Multistate Class Action Proceeds

A number of the claims brought by a couple in a proposed class-action suit against a spray-foam insulation manufacturer and installer have survived a motion to dismiss in Philadelphia's federal court.
5 minute read
September 30, 2005 | The Legal Intelligencer

No Private Right to Sue Under SOX; Only SEC May Enforce, Judge Says

A federal judge has ruled that Section 304 of Sarbanes-Oxley Act - a key provision of the 2002 law that calls for disgorgement of profits and bonuses from top corporate executives in the wake of an alleged accounting scandal - does not provide a private right of action for shareholders to file a derivative suit.
9 minute read
March 17, 2008 | National Law Journal

What went wrong?

For the first time, DOJ's Office of Professional Responsibility has announced it is investigating an astounding failure of legal scholarship: how waterboarding, among the worst forms of torture, came to be deemed legal and authorized for use in CIA interrogations by DOJ's Office of Legal Counsel. President Bush's veto of a torture ban makes this inquiry all the more urgent. The investigation should help us better understand what the OLC has become, and what must be done to reclaim this great institution.
5 minute read
June 17, 2010 | Daily Business Review

DOJ: Nearly 500 arrests in mortgage fraud probe

The Justice Department on Thursday announced a major crackdown on mortgage fraud, disclosing that investigators have made nearly 500 arrests since March in a probe called Operation Stolen Dreams.
1 minute read
October 12, 2007 | New York Law Journal

Sentencing Guidelines

Alan Vinegrad, a partner at Covington & Burling, and Douglas Bloom, an associate at the firm, write that although much attention has been paid to the growing rate of exonerations, much less attention has been paid to what happens after exoneration. The wrongfully convicted face many of the same hurdles as those properly found guilty - finding housing, rebuilding lost careers and relationships. Yet exonerees are often ineligible for the assistance provided to parolees.
15 minute read

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