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January 01, 2008 | Legaltech News

Lost in Translation

When e-discovery involves processing documents in multiple languages, quagmires emerge.
6 minute read
July 15, 2010 | New York Law Journal

Quiet Judge Facing a Foreclosure Crush Gets Lenders' Attention

9 minute read
October 12, 2009 | National Law Journal

VERDICTS & SETTLEMENTS

7 minute read
May 12, 2009 | The Recorder

Marvell No-Cash Settlement OK'd

But Judge Ronald Whyte has delayed payment of $16 million in attorneys fees.
2 minute read
December 06, 2011 | The Legal Intelligencer

The ABCs of APL

Many family law practitioners are not clear about the difference between alimony pendente lite (APL) and spousal support. APL is an order for support granted to a spouse during the pendency of a divorce or annulment proceeding. Pendente lite literally means "while the action is pending." APL is not to be confused with final alimony post-divorce. They are two different entities with different requirements under the law.
6 minute read
May 01, 2012 | The Legal Intelligencer

Cross-Examining Defense Vocational Experts in the Personal Injury Setting

In my experience, many experts who testify predominantly for the defense have little real-life experience in job placement.
5 minute read
July 19, 2010 | National Law Journal

Friends in High Places

The recent opening of Justice Potter Stewart's papers at Yale University's library may not produce a burst of headline-making revelations about the life and career of an important "swing vote," but there are still important files.
8 minute read
March 07, 2013 | New York Law Journal

Panel Faults Mail Reading in Consensual Vehicle Search

A state trooper violated the constitutional rights of a motorist when he read a letter he discovered after the motorist consented to a search of the vehicle, the Second Circuit said yesterday. However, the court found that the trooper was entitled to qualified immunity.
5 minute read
August 06, 2012 | New York Law Journal

Limited Protective Searches of Automobiles: Further Clarification

In his Criminal Law and Procedure column, Barry Kamins, an acting Supreme Court justice, writes: Twenty-three years ago, in 'People v. Torres,' the Court of Appeals parted ways with the U.S. Supreme Court over the predicate for limited protective searches of vehicles in the absence of probable cause. Recently, the First Department identified the proper post-'Torres' standard, after careful analysis of cases from the four departments.
11 minute read
January 12, 2011 | Corporate Counsel

Drug Company's Argument May Not Pass Smell Test With Justices

One sign that an O'Melveny & Myers lawyer was in hot water before the Supreme Court came early, when Justice Antonin Scalia called his client's cold medication 'zircon,' instead of Zicam.
5 minute read

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