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Is Pay-Per-Click Marketing Worth It for Small Firms?
In the constant competition for new clients, small plaintiffs firms are relying on pay-per-click marketing campaigns to increase their odds. Business models vary, with some firms using pay-per-click ads regularly, and other firms preferring more traditional marketing methods. What's more, there's disagreement over the effectiveness of pay-per-click campaigns. Some plaintiffs lawyers say they help boost targeted traffic to firm Web sites, but many say that pay-per-click can be time-consuming and expensive.Age Discrimination Suit Against Foley & Lardner Sparks Discovery Tiff
Plaintiffs in employment suits might suspect ex-bosses are hiding documents in discovery, but they can't always prove it. Charles Wisch, who represents a former Foley & Lardner legal secretary, thinks he can. When his client was fired, she took more than 800 pages of files, which Wisch thinks will be a road map to other Foley files helpful to the age discrimination suit. It's not every day someone admits to stealing documents. But some lawyers say the dispute shows a nagging problem in discrimination suits.View more book results for the query "*"
Trio of Miami commercial condos sells for $1.13 million
Night-Shift Staffer Took On Brobeck Brass
Robert McCaffrey didn't attract much attention when he worked nights doing document processing at Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison. But McCaffrey -- through his online alias Broke Beck -- has been one of the brightest stars of the post-Brobeck collapse. He was unmasked Monday when he was named as lead plaintiff in a suit by former Brobeck employees, who are seeking 60 days' severance from their former employer and from Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, which took over most of Brobeck's operations.3rd Circuit Denies Suit by Teacher Over Right to Support of Abortion
A former Catholic school teacher who was fired for expressing her support of abortion rights in a newspaper ad that ran on the 30th anniversary of Roe v. Wade cannot sue the school under Title VII because such a claim would force the courts to rule on the validity of a religious institution�s beliefs, the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled.Federal Test Applied in New York Child Pornography Prosecution
Application of New York's statute banning child pornography was constitutional in the case of a father convicted of attempting to possess sexual pictures of his children, a Queens Criminal Court judge ruled. Lacking guidance from New York law, the judge turned to a 1986 federal prosecution in California -- United States v. Dost -- that yielded a six-part test to precisely define what is child pornography.Trending Stories
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