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Taylor v. Department of Transportation
A police officer from a neighboring jurisdiction who conducted field sobriety tests of licensee at a driving under the influence checkpoint was not authorized to act as a police officer within the jurisdiction and therefore did not have a reasonable basis on which to arrest licensee. Affirmed.Bank Faces Trial Over Frozen Account
Fleet Bank, one of the nation's largest financial institutions, faces a June 28 contempt trial on charges that it let more than $150,000 slip out of the restrained bank account of a judgment debtor.Paper, packaging company signs 280,000 s.f. lease at Prologis industrial park
Perez Trading has signed a 280,000-square-foot industrial lease at Prologis Gratigny Industrial Park in unincorporated Miami-Dade CountyHigh Court Hones Rules for Policing Drug-Crime Areas
The N.J. Supreme Court sharpens the pencil on special rules of police conduct in high-crime, high-drug-activity areas. Police officers may rely on their experience, training and knowledge of high-crime areas to stop persons and question them, but they must have a "well-grounded" suspicion before detaining or searching someone without a warrant, the justices hold.View more book results for the query "*"
Lawyers: SEC pick knows mutuals
Luis A. Aguilar's experience in the mutual fund industry should prepare him well for a possible stint on the Securities and Exchange Commission in what could be a tumultuous time for the agency, several Atlanta securities attorneys said.President Bush last week nominated Aguilar, a McKenna Long Aldridge partner, to be an SEC commissioner.The Winners and Their Secrets for Success
When trial lawyers get together, they tell war stories about cases they have won or trials that went sour. There is, however, a select group of attorneys who rarely have to talk about losing at the jury level. Each year, The National Law Journal profiles 10 trial attorneys who have established themselves as among the nation's best at avoiding those moments.Online CLE OK'd by Pennsylvania High Court
Pennsylvania lawyers will soon be able to earn continuing legal education credits from the comfort of their own desks. Beginning Jan. 1, accredited CLE programs will be available online. Ruth E. Ganister, chairwoman of the Pennsylvania Continuing Legal Education Board, says that for younger lawyers in particular, accustomed to online work and research, "it is almost a disservice not to have an Internet-based CLE."Trending Stories
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