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On Facebook, wife learns of husband's second wedding
Lynn France typed into Facebook the name of the woman with whom she believed her husband was having an affair and found a photo album full of Disney wedding photos.Microsoft Rivals File Broad EU Antitrust Complaint
The European Committee for Interoperable Systems, which includes IBM, Oracle and Sun Microsystems, Wednesday filed a complaint with the European Commission, alleging Microsoft's business practices threaten to deny real choice among competing software products. Strong antitrust law enforcement seems to the only way to stop "the sustained anticompetitive behavior of Microsoft," according to ECIS chairman Simon Awde. Microsoft said the companies were responding to innovation with litigation.Right to Refuse Medical Treatment Limited by High Court
Unless they also serve as health care agents, plenary guardians do not have the ability to refuse life-preserving medical treatment for incompetent people not suffering from end-stage conditions or who are permanently unconscious, the state Supreme Court has ruled.Nasdaq's Move Bolsters Regulatory Unit
The National Association of Securities Dealers' plan to split off the Nasdaq Stock Market into a separate, for-profit company will significantly bolster the financial resources and independence of NASD's regulatory unit, according to a representative of the NASD. Pending approval by both the SEC and a majority of NASD members, NASD plans to convert Nasdaq into a separate profit-making company later this year. The plan was approved by NASD's board of governors on Tuesday.Outside Law Firm Cybersecurity Under Scrutiny
Bank of America Merrill Lynch is auditing the cybersecurity practices at its outside law firms, partly under pressure from government regulators.View more book results for the query "*"
Bill Targets Lawyers Who Threaten Immigrants
Darrell Steinberg's legislation would expose lawyers to bar discipline if they retaliate against disgruntled workers.Gulf Coast Oil Rig Disaster Sets Off Gusher of Work for Attorneys
From Texas to Florida, the litigation rush is on, in the wake of the April 20 oil rig explosion off the coast of Louisiana. "It's sort of like a gold rush for clients," says Brian O'Neill, lead plaintiffs counsel in the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill. Plaintiffs attorney Mark Lanier says the Gulf Coast oil spill is much bigger than Valdez. "This makes the Valdez look like an oil leak in a car," Lanier says. "This is going to be, in my estimation, the largest tort we've had in this country."N.C. Central dean returning to private practice
Raymond Pierce, the dean of North Carolina Central University School of Law, will step down at the end of the academic year to become a partner in the Raleigh office of law firm Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough.U.S. told to defend secret court actions
A Bush administration defense of secret judicial proceedings in a post-Sept. 11 challenge may encounter a more skeptical U.S. Supreme Court two years after the terrorist attacks.Trending Stories
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