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Litigator of the Week: The Need for Speed
Midway through a four-week trial involving a breach-of-contract dispute, a juror sent a note to the judge, asking, "Can you tell us how many more people will take the stand?" A Houston lawyer representing one of the parties took the hint. He shaved almost two days off the eight days he initially had planned to present, and it paid off with a $10.38 million judgment.Electronic Evidence in Bankruptcy Cases
Realizing when and how electronic information is created and stored is the first step in marshalling the electronic evidence to prove whether a debt is dischargeable, whether a claim should be allowed or almost any other dispute in a bankruptcy case.17 states sue to force EPA to respond to Supreme Court ruling on global warming
BOSTON AP - A group of state attorneys general is taking the EPA back to court to try to force it to comply with a Supreme Court ruling that rebuked the Bush administration for inaction on global warming.The high court decided a year ago that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are air pollutants under the Clean Air Act and ordered the Environmental Protection Agency to take action.Losing Plaintiff Objects To Judge's Refusal To Poll Jury
The administrator of the estate of a man who died in prison is challenging the trial court's decision to not allow an attorney to poll the jury following a defense verdict. The estate had sued the Department of Corrections for civil rights violations, claiming that correction officers used excessive force in the events leading to the man's death.View more book results for the query "*"
Citi Agrees to Pay $360 Million to End Lehman Trustee Suit
Pa's No Child Left Behind Appeals Policy Unconstitutional
The process by which Pennsylvania�s Department of Education permits school districts to appeal determinations made pursuant to the federal No Child Left Behind Law is unconstitutional, a Commonwealth Court panel has ruled.Military Tribunal Case Comes Before Skeptical Supreme Court
The Bush administration ran into skepticism from the Supreme Court on Tuesday as justices heard debate, in unusual 90-minute arguments, over a landmark war powers dispute testing the legal rights of enemy combatants held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Justices seemed especially concerned about a law passed by Congress last year that the administration argues strips the high court of jurisdiction over habeas petitions filed by Guantanamo Bay detainees.Trending Stories
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