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May 05, 2010 | Corporate Counsel

Pay-for-Delay Deals Threatened as Second Circuit Judges Question Existing Law

The balance may finally be shifting in favor of the challengers to so-called reverse payment settlements in drug patent litigation.
4 minute read
May 04, 2005 | Legaltech News

Control of Digital Data Roils Attorneys

Increasingly, government and business are attempting to regulate and limit the use of digital technology due to heightened fears over privacy, identify theft and litigation. As a result, at a time when attorneys are beginning to rely more heavily on technology to win cases, they often have to struggle to get their hands on automobile "black box" data, videos of medical procedures and crucial e-mails.
8 minute read
September 22, 2005 | Law.com

Growing Trend: Prosecution for Workers' Injuries, Deaths

A trend is emerging in the field of white-collar crime that is unrelated to recent, well publicized financial scandals. Local and federal prosecutors nationwide are increasingly considering criminal charges against corporations and their managers in connection with workplace injuries and deaths. Stephen G. Sozio and Earnest B. Gregory examine this trend and provide guidance on steps that a corporation can take to discourage prosecution when an injury or death occurs.
8 minute read
January 03, 2007 | Law.com

Real Estate Attorneys Become Corporate Dealmakers

Real estate attorneys are adopting more of the deal-making skills of their corporate counterparts as they get pulled deeper into the real estate sector's surging M&A activity. Some say clients that buy and sell high-dollar, multiproperty assets increasingly want a lawyer who not only understands how to assess properties, but can also play a role in crafting a transaction. The buying and selling of real estate investment trusts, especially publicly traded ones, is at the heart of the increased activity.
7 minute read
November 23, 2010 | The Legal Intelligencer

Phila. Jury Awards $27.6 Million for Promo Video Injury

A Philadelphia jury returned a $27.6 million verdict Monday in favor of a woman and her husband who said she was injured while taking part in a promotional video for an artificial knee implant.
4 minute read
September 14, 2010 | Corporate Counsel

Count on Him

Warren Dettinger has a lot to keep track of. As general counsel for Diebold Inc., the largest U.S. manufacturer of automated teller machines he's definitely got a lot to ... count on.
5 minute read
October 14, 2004 | Law.com

China Is Newest Land of Legal Opportunity

6 minute read
Richardson v. Superintendent of Mid-Orange Correctional Facility, 09-3655-pr
Publication Date: 2010-09-21
Practice Area:
Industry:
Court: United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit
Judge: Before: Jacobs, Ch.J., Lynch, C.J., and Restani, J.*
Attorneys:
For plaintiff: JONATHAN SVETKEY, Watters & Svetkey, LLP, New York, NY, for Petitioner-Appellee.
For defendant: CAMILLE O'CAMILLE O'HARA GILLESPIE, Assistant District Attorney (Leonard Joblove, Assistant District Attorney, of counsel), for Charles J. Hynes,
Case number: 09-3655-pr

Cite as: Richardson v. Superintendent of Mid-Orange Correctional Facility, 09-3655-pr, NYLJ 1202472251780, at *1 (2d Cir., Decided September 20, 2010)Before: Ja

May 04, 2000 | Law.com

Making Gains, But Still Far to Go

As recently as the 1970s, African-American lawyers were routinely mistaken for messengers by co-workers. Into the 1980s, women lawyers were asked to fetch coffee for male counterparts. The dozen or so minority and woman lawyers who were among the first to reach partnership status in Washington, D.C law firms all have stories like these to tell. Today, minorities account for 3.3 percent of partners in major firms in the District and women make up just over 15 percent of the city's partners.
11 minute read
January 14, 2010 | Law.com

High Court Justices Wary of Granting NFL Antitrust Immunity

After Supreme Court arguments in the titanic battle over the antitrust status of the National Football League, it did not seem the NFL would have an easy touchdown in its long quest for baseball-like immunity from antitrust laws. It's been spotlighted as potentially the biggest sports case in decades, because it may impact other leagues and other businesses that can be viewed either as a single entity or a "joint venture." But the justices seemed reluctant to use it as a vehicle for major change in antitrust doctrine.
4 minute read

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