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Batchelor Foundation blames BDO Seidman audits for investment losses
The work of accounting firm BDO Seidman is under scrutiny in a Miami courtroom in a case filed by the Batchelor Foundation. The Miami Beach nonprofit claims $79 million in investment losses at a publicly traded company that flopped 10 years ago.Supreme Court Decides Indexing Deeds and Mortgages No Longer Required
In a decision that title insurers are trying to fully digest, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has decided that documents transferring permanent interests in real estate do not need to be indexed after recording in order to provide constructive notice to subsequent purchasers or lenders. In doing so, the Supreme Court also determined that even though a mortgage by its own terms is for a period of years, it is nonetheless a permanent document.10 Marketing Tips for Time-Pressed Lawyers
At every law firm consultant Stacy West Clark has worked with, she encounters lawyers who say they'd love to market, but don't have the time. For busy lawyers, Clark provides 10 tips for marketing effectively, including a list of which marketing activities may have the biggest payoffs.View more book results for the query "*"
Microsoft To Buy Certain Blue Horseshoe Technology
Blue Horseshoe said it reached a deal to sell certain lines of warehousing and transportation supply chain technology to Microsoft Corp. for an undisclosed sum.Innocence Project Icon Settles Malpractice Claim
Barry C. Scheck, co-founder of the Innocence Project, and law his firm, Cochran, Neufeld & Scheck, have agreed to pay $900,000 to settle a malpractice claim by a man wrongfully convicted of rape. The settlement ended acrimonious litigation that began in June 2005.Ethiopian Coffee Trademark Dispute With Starbucks Runs Hot and Cold
Arnold & Porter's Robert Winter probably never thought he'd be pushing his client's message on YouTube when he agreed to help the government of Ethiopia protect the intellectual property associated with the names of its most famous coffee-growing regions. So why was he doing it? The answer: coffee. Specifically, it's a conflict between Starbucks and Ethiopia over the country's efforts to protect its IP rights, thus obtaining a better price for a commodity that accounts for about half of its export income.Trending Stories
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