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January 05, 2006 | Law.com

Attorney Carves Out Law Firm Merger Niche

Shartsis Friese partner Jeffrey O'Connell has quietly created a niche practice in advising lawyers and law firms in starting, merging and ending partnerships. With mergers getting more complicated, his services are increasingly in demand -- especially at smaller shops that don't have their own army of M&A lawyers. Although legal consultants say it's unusual for firms to seek counsel for mergers, they also say it makes sense in some cases.
5 minute read
January 31, 2005 | National Law Journal

Admit It

Admit it—requests for admission evoke a bit of terror. Your opponent is setting you up for disaster. Nothing good can come from this.
9 minute read
February 18, 2008 | National Law Journal

Court Decisions

A trial judge acted improperly in allocating $6.9 million in attorney fees without a factual basis, sealing documents and issuing a gag order, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled.
12 minute read
July 11, 2002 | Daily Report Online

Morgan Gets His Man: Dorsey Guilty

R. Robin McDonaldrmcdonald.amlaw.comALBANY-In the South Georgia courtroom where he first took the oath as a lawyer, DeKalb County District Attorney J. Thomas Morgan III won the most sensational case of his career."It's been a long time," Morgan said through tears after 12 Dougherty jurors affirmed a verdict convicting former DeKalb County Sheriff Sidney C.
10 minute read
June 16, 2008 | National Law Journal

Fighting on the stand

5 minute read
December 06, 2004 | National Law Journal

Fraud case to shed light on Tax Court

The combined outcome of two cases scheduled for review by the high court may affect the operations of the Tax Court, and impact the processes of other judicial bodies.
6 minute read
May 01, 2006 | National Law Journal

Law school deans feel the heat from ranking

Nancy Rapoport was never a fan of law school rankings. Today, that's an understatement.
4 minute read
May 10, 2004 | National Law Journal

Judge alleges slander; invokes rare recusal

In a rare move, a federal judge in Alabama has recused herself from all trials involving a lead U.S. attorney, alleging that the prosecutor slandered her.
4 minute read
April 27, 2009 | National Law Journal

After-hours conduct sanctionable

Many states' rules regulating attorney conduct govern not only what they do in court and with clients, but also what they do after hours. States across the nation have adopted ethics rules that have landed lawyers in hot water for everything from organizing poker games to inappropriate touching on commuter trains. The South Carolina Supreme Court was the latest court to weigh in on the issue, holding on April 20 that a four-month suspension was an appropriate sanction for a lawyer who'd had three speeding tickets and a verbal altercation with his veterinarian's assistant.
4 minute read
September 01, 2003 | Law.com

Cisco et al. v. Huawei et al.

3 minute read

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