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January 13, 2009 | New York Law Journal

No Personal Interest Found to Enforce Terms of Bequest to Hospital

5 minute read
February 08, 2010 | The Legal Intelligencer

Henderson v. Keisling, PICS Case No. 10-1122 (E.D. Pa. Jan. 21, 2010) Kelly, S. J. (6 pages).

Henderson v. Keisling, PICS Case No. 10-1122 (E.D. Pa. Jan. 21, 2010) Kelly, S. J. (6 pages).
2 minute read
May 26, 2003 | The Legal Intelligencer

Once Seen As Wild, June Could Be a Tame Month For Legislature

On the surface, the General Assembly is facing a legislative agenda next month that will be . well, less pleasant than a June walk in the park. A proposal to allow slot machines at the horse racing tracks, medical malpractice measures, education funding, and tax increases all await lawmakers when they return to Harrisburg on June 2. Nonetheless, June could end up being surprisingly low key, say some long-time Harrisburg observers.
2 minute read
May 10, 2004 | National Law Journal

Web masters

Nary a big firm would be caught dead these days without a Web site, yet Internet experts say many firms lag behind their techno-savvy clients. But for every firm that is doing it wrong, there's another that is lighting up the Internet..
6 minute read
July 12, 2012 | Daily Business Review

Fired stockbroker prevails in Morgan Keegan arbitration

John Quaranta and Marguerite Snyder, along with Ronald Weil, helped their client win a defamation award after he was fired and accused of making unauthorized stock trades.
4 minute read
July 16, 2012 | New York Law Journal

Failure to Swear in Witness Results in Dismissal of Case

The violation of an "elemental" rule - that a grand jury witness must swear to tell the truth before testifying - has persuaded an appellate court to adopt the "exceptional" remedy of dismissing charges filed in 1996 after a man allegedly shot an elderly woman three times in the chest and partially strangled her 4-year-old granddaughter.
5 minute read
February 24, 2010 | National Law Journal

Justices Seem Receptive to First Amendment Challenge to Anti-Terror Law

The U.S. Supreme Court appeared troubled on Tuesday by the broad sweep of a federal law that makes it a crime to give "material support" and "expert advice" to designated terrorist groups. The law was challenged as a vague or overbroad violation of First Amendment rights. But what seemed to bother the justices most was the assertion by U.S. Solicitor General Elena Kagan that the law would bar a lawyer from writing an amicus curiae brief on behalf of such a group in U.S. courts.
5 minute read
March 07, 2012 | New York Law Journal

Cruz v. FXDirectDealer LLC

Failure to Allege Separate RICO Enterprise Dooms Trading Fraud Class Action
1 minute read
July 11, 2012 | The Legal Intelligencer

Pa. questioned by feds over drop in Medicaid rolls

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - The federal government is asking why Pennsylvania's Medicaid rolls dropped over the past year, and is suggesting that some people might have been improperly kicked off.
1 minute read

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