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September 19, 2005 | National Law Journal

Movement Around the Firms

Comings and goings around D.C.'s law firms...
1 minute read
February 28, 2008 | The Recorder

Adaimy v. Ruhl

4 minute read
November 19, 2008 | Daily Report Online

FBI agent killed serving warrant near Pittsburgh

GLENSHAW, Pa. AP - A former police officer who had been an FBI agent for less than two years was fatally shot Wednesday as he served a warrant at the home of an alleged cocaine dealer near Pittsburgh.Agent Samuel Hicks was shot about 6 a.m. in the middle-class community of Indiana Township. He was taking part in a drug-ring roundup at the home of Robert Korbe, who was taken into custody on the drug charges.
2 minute read
April 30, 2007 | Law.com

Family Responsibilities Discrimination Claims Are on the Rise

Employees across the nation -- both women and men -- are increasingly alleging discrimination based upon family caregiving responsibilities. Randi W. Kochman, a partner in Cole, Schotz, Meisel, Forman & Leonard's employment law department, discusses the legal theories supporting these claims, and details some pending cases. One involves a female attorney's claim that a compensation committee member suggested she give up shareholder status and work part-time to spend more time with her family.
8 minute read
October 01, 2010 | New York Law Journal

Practitioners Blast ABA Over Ethics Opinion Charges

4 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book New Jersey Business Litigation 2025 Authors: Paul A. Rowe, Andrea J. Sullivan View this Book

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November 03, 2006 | Law.com

Pa. High Court: Slipshod Workmanship Doesn't Trigger Accident Coverage

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has established a bright-line rule holding that an insurer's duty to defend a policyholder insured against accidents cannot be triggered by allegations of shoddy workmanship. The case arose from a complaint filed by Bethlehem Steel Corp. over a faulty coke oven battery. The oven manufacturer said the damage was caused by heavy rains during construction, but the high court rejected the argument that this was an accident for purposes of the manufacturer's insurance policy.
4 minute read
March 14, 2003 | New York Law Journal

2 minute read
July 10, 2008 | Daily Report Online

Exxon footnote shrouded in mystery

The footnote was easy to miss. It began on page 27 of Exxon Shipping Co. v. Baker, issued by the Supreme Court on June 25, and it ended on the next page. But Justice David Souter's footnote 17 has reverberated around law schools, leading Hugh Young, a lawyer involved in the landmark punitive damages case, to predict that "it is going to become the great mystery footnote of the decade.
5 minute read
August 13, 2008 | Daily Report Online

Tenn. teen battles school's Confederate flag ban

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. AP - Tommy DeFoe wore his Southern pride on his Confederate flag belt buckle Wednesday as he argued in federal court that a school dress code banning such items violated his free speech rights."I am fighting for my heritage and my rights as a Southerner and an American," said the lanky DeFoe, 18, during a break in his trial.
3 minute read
March 27, 2006 | New Jersey Law Journal

Repayment or Revenge

Eye for an Eye By William Ian Miller (Cambridge University Press, 304 pages)
4 minute read

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