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Prop 65 deals shot down in Calif.
A California appellate court Friday tossed out six court-approved Proposition 65 settlements involving major hotel chains, ruling that the trial court did not evaluate whether the settlements "served the public interest."Time to Revisit the Ethics of Metadata
Michael B. de Leeuw and Eric A. Hirsch of Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson argue that, given the substantive changes to the Model Rules and Rules of Professional Conduct and the matured understanding of the technology that have come in the more than 10 years since the NYSBA Committee on Professional Ethics issued its opinion on a lawyer's ethical obligations concerning metadata, the time has come for the Committee to reassess its position.Judge: Davis failed to prove innocence
A federal judge in Savannah on Tuesday ruled against Troy Davis' claims that he is innocent of the 1989 murder for which he's been sentenced to death.The decision came nearly a year after the U.S. Supreme Court granted the request Davis' supporters had been making for years: ordering a judge to review what they say is evidence showing that Davis did not murder Savannah police officer Mark Allen MacPhail.Lawyer to Head State Biz, Transport Office
No new judicial appointments secretary, but lawyers are still getting gigs in the Schwarzenegger Administration. Also Blogged: So, seriously, where is the new John Davies? Prospective judges can�t vet themselves, y�know. No Subscription RequiredView more book results for the query "*"
Gross Construction Assoc. Inc. v. American Manufacturers Mutual Insurance Co.
Claims Analysis Including Possible Litigation Position Is Protected Under Work Product Doctrine2nd Circuit chides, removes judge from case over sentencing
A federal judge was removed from a case because the 2nd Circuit said he demonstrated "scorn" in his approach to the sentencing of a tax fraud defendant. This is the fourth time since 2008 that the circuit has rebuked the judge.Police Say Pennsylvania Newspaper Reporter Snared in Internet Sex Sting
A newspaper reporter has been charged with trying to arrange a sexual encounter via the Internet with an undercover police officer posing as a 13-year-old girl. Steve Sembrat, a sports reporter for the Times Leader, was arrested Sunday in Springfield Township outside Philadelphia, where he had gone to meet the girl, who turned out to be a detective with Delaware County's Internet sex crimes unit, authorities said.Trending Stories
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