0 results for '*'
Times reporters' call logs not shielded
THE PHONE RECORDS of New York Times reporters are not protected by the First Amendment or a common law privilege from a subpoena issued by a Chicago grand jury, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday. A divided panel declined to decide the issue of whether a common law privilege exists for reporters' phone records, but said that "any such privilege would be overcome on the present facts" in The New York Times Co.Students: Take the long view home
An uneasy economy yields an equally uneasy season at Northwestern, but glimmers of hope still abound.Environmental Rights Amendment to the Pa. Constitution: A Force for 'Yes'?
In July, the Commonwealth Court decided a case under the Environmental Rights Amendment to the Pennsylvania Constitution. Energy Conservation Council of Pennsylvania v. Public Utility Commission upheld the Public Utility Commission's decision to allow an electric utility to construct a transmission line over challenges raised by environmental groups and the Office of Consumer Advocate under, among other things, Article I, Section 27, of the state constitution.William Clark, Former State Justice and Reagan Advisor, Dies at 81
View more book results for the query "*"
Reed Smith Fends Off Bid to Overturn Fee Award in Highmark Patent Case
Two years ago, a judge slapped McKool Smith and Sidley Austin with Rule 11 sanctions for bringing supposedly frivolous patent claims on behalf of their client, Allcare Health Management Systems. The firms managed to get the sanctions vacated soon afterward, but their efforts to redeem their client and undo a $5 million attorney fee award haven't fared so well. In a 2-1 ruling issued on Tuesday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit affirmed that Allcare must pay health care company Highmark Inc.'s legal bill for fending off Allcare's infringement suit.Prosecutors Battle PD Over Help in Civil Case
Santa Clara judge Marcel Poché (left) is expected to rule Monday on an unusual attempt by prosecutors to bounce a public defender off a death penalty case. The district attorney's office says that Charles Gillan, a deputy public defender, erred in helping his accused cop-killer client, and his father, with paperwork in a parallel wrongful death suit filed by the victim's family.Home sales dip 1.7 percent on tight inventory
Sales of previously occupied homes fell in September after hitting a two-year high in August, in part because there were fewer homes available for sale.Trending Stories
Law Offices of Gary Martin Hays & Associates, P.C.
(470) 294-1674
Law Offices of Mark E. Salomone
(857) 444-6468
Smith & Hassler
(713) 739-1250
Aligning Client Needs with Lawyer Growth and Profitability
Brought to you by BigHand
Download Now
Technology to Make E-Discovery Smarter, Not Harder
Brought to you by Nuix
Download Now
Does Generative AI Have the Power to Transform Legal Services?
Brought to you by HaystackID
Download Now
How This Personal Injury Firm Reduced Client Intake Time by 80%
Brought to you by PracticePanther
Download Now