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Fla. Court Reporters Caught Between Contempt and Not Getting Paid
Three Florida court reporters say they worked as independent contractors for Capitol Reporters and have been waiting for thousands of dollars worth of payment for transcript work going back to 2005. Meanwhile, they are required by courts to produce transcripts even if they don't get paid -- at risk of being held in contempt of court and having to go to jail. The three reporters say that there are other court reporters like them who are owed back fees.Michelle Simon appointed Pace Law interim dean
Pace Law School of White Plains, N.Y., appointed Michelle S. Simon to be its interim dean, succeeding Stephen J. Friedman, who became Pace's president on June 4.Ask the Marketers: How Vendors Can Avoid Rookie PR Mistakes
Ask the Marketers: Christy Burke, Jobst Elster, Amy Juers & Cathy Kenton offer advice to legal tech vendors on getting news coverage.Business Rulings Favor Uniform Federal Regime
Daily Decision Alert: Vol. 11, No. 93 -- May 15, 2003
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Brennan v. New York Law School
Court Explains Setting of Charging Liens In Settled Suit Against New York Law SchoolSilence Still Golden for Nontestifying Defendants
Prosecutors may not use nontestifying defendants' pre-Miranda silence as substantive evidence of their guilt, a sharply split state Superior Court has ruled.Improper Solicitation, Post-Release Supervision, Stabilized Rent Increases
In their New York Court of Appeals Roundup, Simpson Thacher & Bartlett partners Roy L. Reardon and Mary Elizabeth McGarry discuss: a decision arising out of the sale of a business in which the Court of Appeals provided some guidance on what constitutes improper solicitation by the seller of its former clients; a decision resolving six cases in which the sentencing court failed to impose post-release supervision during the initial sentencing hearing; and the Court's take on whether the New York City Rent Guidelines Board has the authority to promulgate orders allowing different rent increases for apartments based upon whether there had been a recent vacancy.Lawyer: KPMG settles Fulton case on faulty tax shelters
A TRIAL SCHEDULED to begin Monday between accounting giant KPMG and former clients suing over tax shelters later ruled illegal by the Internal Revenue Service appears to have been averted by a settlement."The case hasn't been dismissed yet but it is settled and is not going to trial," plaintiffs' counsel H.Trending Stories
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