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Microsoft Expected To Reveal Next-Generation Xbox
Microsoft is set to reveal the next generation of its Xbox entertainment console following eight years since the launch of the Xbox 360. The original Xbox debuted in 2001, and its high-definition successor premiered in 2005.Bank of America to pay $137 million in Muni cases
Bank of America Corp. agreed to pay $137 million to settle investigations of its involvement in a conspiracy to rig bids on 88 municipal bond contracts, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and Justice Department said.Letter to the Editor: Verdict Not Scientifically Proven
The Vioxx decision is an outrage because the jury wanted "to send a message," when it was not scientifically proven that Vioxx had caused the man's heart attack.View more book results for the query "*"
Bourbon St. bouncer acquitted in death of Ga college student
BATON ROUGE, La. AP - A second Bourbon Street bouncer was acquitted Thursday of squeezing the life from a visiting Georgia college student whose friends had been turned away from a New Orleans karaoke bar on New Year's Eve 2004.Jurors deliberated 2 hours before acquitting Clay Montz of Metairie of manslaughter in the death of Levon Jones, 26, of Statesboro, Ga.Judge Throws Party in Court Before Sentencing Man to Life in Prison
A judge welcomed a former fugitive back to her courtroom by throwing a mock party complete with balloons, streamers and a cake -- before sentencing him to life in prison. Billy Wayne Williams had been convicted in absentia of aggravated assault against his former girlfriend. The bizarre incident raised questions of whether Judge Faith Johnson violated decorum and impartiality. If a complaint is filed, she may face misconduct charges.Use the Internet in Your Daily Practice
A dozen Web sites of interest to lawyers have emerged in recent months, including new sites that help locate litigation consultants and revamped government and public-interest sites.Corporations Never Intended as Electoral-Process Participants
On Jan. 21, a 5-4 majority of the U.S. Supreme Court set back the United States electoral process to the 18th century in its decision in Citizens United v. FEC. The five self-styled "strict constructionists" stood the First Amendment on its side, diluted the strength of our citizens' control of the electoral process and empowered the vast combination of financial giants we call private corporations.Trending Stories
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