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Do's and Don'ts of High-Tech Trial Presentations
An observer of high-tech courtroom dramas, Andy Seldon, an attorney and director of information services for the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota, has seen technology can be just as harmful as helpful. He offers a guide to give you the competitive edge before the bench.Clarification to TD Bank Story from August 9, 2012
A clarification regarding "TD Bank In-house Counsel Sanctioned by Rothstein Judge" (from August 9, 2012). It was not our intention to imply that in-house counsel Richard Berman was implicated by the Court with involvement in any of the discovery misconduct that gave rise to the sanctions. He was not.Global car hunt marks bankruptcy case
A bankruptcy case has attorney James C. Frenzel chasing down Ferraris, Lamborghinis and other luxury vehicles.As counsel to a court-appointed trustee in a case in Atlanta bankruptcy court, Frenzel has spent the past several months identifying the location of high-priced sedans, SUVs and sports cars, many of which are strewn all over the globe.View more book results for the query "*"
U.S. Attorney: Company Reaction to Options Inquiries Crucial to Whether Prosecutors Indict
The federal prosecutor overseeing Silicon Valley said last week the way a company responds to stock option backdating allegations is crucial to whether or not it will be indicted. Kevin Ryan, the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of California, in July created a task force to pursue criminal charges related to stock option backdating. Ryan's office has issued one of the only criminal indictments over options backdating, against two executives at San Jose, Calif.-based Brocade Communications System.Supreme Court prospects are Kagan, Wood, Garland
WASHINGTON AP - Two experienced federal judges and the Obama administration's top Supreme Court lawyer are widely considered the leading candidates for the next high court opening if Justice John Paul Stevens retires this year.Stevens, 89, is expected to decide soon whether to step down after more than 34 years on the court.Defense Attorneys: Shut Off the Leaks in Probes
Leaks -- confidential information passed to journalists by anonymous sources -- have for decades gone hand in hand with government investigations. Lately they've become a royal pain for defense attorneys. Lawyers blame federal prosecutors and agents for tipping journalists about grand jury proceedings and say a recent trend of supposedly secret testimony appearing in news stories hurts their clients. And the government, they say, hasn't done enough to turn off the faucet.Trending Stories
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