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Roberts' Seizure Focuses Attention on Justices' Health, Privacy
Two Supreme Court justices have had cancer. Another has a stent to keep an artery open. Now the chief justice has suffered his second unexplained seizure in 14 years. The justices themselves decide whether and how to continue their work in the midst of health problems, but the disclosure of Chief Justice John Roberts' seizure last week called attention to a thorny issue -- protecting the justices' privacy and especially news about their health.How Not To Settle a Multiparty Suit
In-house lawyer Karel Zaruba helped his employer, Warner-Lambert, dodge a bullet six years ago when he struck a deal with plaintiffs' lawyers to drop a planned mass breach-of-warranty suit. For $235,000 the lawyers agreed not to sue over the effectiveness of Warner's Nix head-lice shampoo. Most of all, the lawyers agreed not to disclose the existence of the agreement to their 90 clients, who together received only $10,000 in refunds. The remaining $225,000 the lawyers kept.Contracts lawyers priming for smaller budget
With fewer dollars from Uncle Sam in the coming years, government-contracts attorneys in Washington are preparing their clients about what could happen to them after plans for a smaller federal budget are hashed out on Capitol Hill. The spending drought means contracts lawyers are having to soothe some jittery clients.Pitt Law Hires Temple Prof as New Dean
The University of Pittsburgh School of Law has hired Temple University Beasley School of Law professor William "Chip" Carter Jr. as its new dean.View more book results for the query "*"
Bipartisan coalition urges reform of the criminal justice system
Negligence Suit Filed Against Parents of Defendant in Murder Trial
The parents of a Lake Worth, Fla., man currently on trial for a 1998 triple murder are facing their own legal troubles in connection with the crime. Anita Charest, the mother of one of the murder victims, Charlotte Kenyon, has filed a lawsuit in Palm Beach Circuit Court against Donald and Marcella Chamberlain, alleging they were negligent in storing the .45 caliber handgun that police say was used in the crime.California may raise the bar on ethics
California bar leaders, worried that law students aren't being drilled sufficiently on legal ethics, are leaning toward the toughening of the state's requirements for passing a nationally administered test on the subject.Valenzuela v. City of New York
Free With Registration: Plaintiff's Lawyer 'Tainted' Negligence Trial; Case Arising From Softball Game RemandedTrending Stories
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