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Company's Libel Case Heats Up Against Consultant Cardiologist Over Medical Trials
What's in a Name? A Lot if You're an Angel
When owner Arte Moreno renamed the 2002 World Series champions the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, the city slapped the team with a lawsuit, claiming tens of millions in lost publicity. The suit claims the team violated a 1996 contract that required "Anaheim" be featured prominently in all team-related merchandise and advertisements. Many fans say the war of words obscures what the debate is really about: A general failure to recognize that Orange County has its own identity that doesn't need LA's cachet.Heller Shareholders Lay Out Bankruptcy Theories
A group of about 90 former Heller Ehrman partners has logged a defense against creditors' claims that the firm was insolvent in 2007, a key point the creditors need to prove to build a fraudulent transfer suit. The brief -- which is the first peep from any former Heller partners in the 10-month-old bankruptcy -- blames the recession for the firm's demise and asserts that creditors cannot possibly prove that Heller was undercapitalized by the end of 2007, or that funds were fraudulently transferred thereafter.View more book results for the query "*"
Orrick Overpaid by Nevada Politician It Backed
Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe profited -- and was overpaid by nearly $96,000 -- from improperly handled state funds, according to a bipartisan Nevada legislative audit. The payer, the Nevada College Savings Program, had been managed by then-state treasurer and current Republican Lt. Gov. Brian Krolicki, a recipient of $29,000 in campaign donations from Orrick and its lawyers. Although the audit found no wrongdoing on Orrick's part, it criticized how work was given to the firm.Pa. Justices Let Stand Record-Setting $65 Million Verdicts
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has refused to review the two largest verdicts -- worth more than $65 million -- ever handed up by Luzerne County juries. The high court's ruling upholds a decision that rejected the appeals of a sprinkler system manufacturer that was held partially liable for a warehouse fire that destroyed millions of stored documents. The Superior Court rejected the argument that the sprinkler system was not a "product" because it was not completely installed at the time of the fire.Intellectual Property Litigation
Lewis R. Clayton, a partner at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, writes that the evolution of home video recording technology continues to generate complex copyright disputes between distributors and copyright owners, in which the important rights can turn on seemingly arcane issues. The latest example concerns Cablevision's proposed "Remote Storage Digital Video Recorder system, designed to give cable subscribers the functionality of a TiVo-like personal digital video recorder.Trending Stories
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