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September 26, 2011 | New Jersey Law Journal

Case Tests Local Government Liability For Failure To Police for Potholes

In a case argued Monday, the state Supreme Court is considering whether county and local governments can be held liable for not fixing potholes they might not know about, or for not having detection systems in place to spot them.
4 minute read
July 18, 2005 | Law.com

Collective Bargaining

GCs at eight big companies team up to press law firms for better service and lower fees.
3 minute read
August 29, 2006 | Law.com

Further References

8 minute read
April 13, 2011 | New York Law Journal

Marketplace

Finding the large block of space it sought in lower Manhattan, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr has signed a 20-year lease with Silverstein Properties Inc., for 210,000 square feet at 7 World Trade Center, or 250 Greenwich St. That is 8 percent more than its current New York space. In mid-2012, the firm will leave its 168,871-square-feet headquarters at 399 Park Ave., where it and its predecessor firm had been a tenant since 2000.
5 minute read
April 03, 2013 | Legaltech News

Emails Detail Use of Controversial Surveillance Tool

Emails describing the government's use of sophisticated "stingray" surveillance technology to track people using their cellphone signals have emerged at the center of a controversy that lies at the intersection of privacy and evolving technology.
5 minute read
August 01, 2013 | Texas Lawyer

Lawyer Suspended for Dealings With an Associate and Client

A Queens lawyer who told a just-hired associate to misrepresent herself to clients in order to collect fees and also mishandled a client's attempt to avert foreclosure has been suspended for five years.
5 minute read
September 12, 2011 | Texas Lawyer

Litigator of the Week: RICO Suave

Five years ago, a Haynes and Boone partner read some email evidence that convinced him his client could bring a rare civil RICO case, which can result in treble damages but is difficult to prove. The decision ultimately led to a $7.2 million final judgment in favor of his clients, issued Aug. 30 by U.S. District Judge Jorge A. Solis in the Northern District of Texas in Dallas.
5 minute read
September 29, 2004 | Law.com

Manual is Labor

While most law firms have embraced the many recent advances in legal technology, many continue to utilize traditional manual calendaring systems to do their court calendaring. Whether their refusal to adapt stems from resistance to changing such a fundamental task or lack of knowledge about available alternatives, these firms are spending excessive amounts of time and money on a system that is continually exposing them to numerous error and malpractice risks.
7 minute read
July 02, 2013 | New York Law Journal

Circuit Vacates Class Certification in Google Litigation

The circuit said Monday that Judge Denny Chin's decision to certify the class was premature because he had not determined the merits of Google's fair-use defense under the Copyright Act to copying and displaying "snippets" of millions of books for the Library Project of its "Google Books" search tool.
5 minute read

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