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Supreme Court Appears Skeptical of Obstruction Charge for Jan. 6 Defendants
"There have been many violent protests that have interfered with proceedings," Justice Clarence Thomas said. "Has the government applied this provision to other protests in the past and has this been the government's position throughout the lifespan of the statute?"Housing Discrimination; Licensee Succession Holdover: This Week in Scott Mollen's Realty Law Digest
Scott Mollen discusses "Katz v. New York City Housing Preservation and Development," where a housing discrimination case was dismissed, and "Diversified Equities LLC v. Swint," based on a licensee holdover proceeding,Patent Data Unicorn Names First GC, Hiring From Another AI-Driven Unicorn
Eric Topel joined Patsnap this month from Nevada-based Socure. The Singapore-founded company raised $300 million from an investor group that included Japan's SoftBank at a valuation topping $1 billion in 2021.AI Patent Unicorn Patsnap Names Eric Topel as First GC
Eric Topel joined Patsnap this month from Nevada-based Socure. The Singapore-founded company raised $300 million from an investor group that included Japan's SoftBank at a valuation topping $1 billion in 2021.'Clearly Inappropriate': Why This Judge Slashed $24M Off of $26.2 Crash Verdict
"While plaintiff seeks to paint an almost demonic magnitude of intent centering around 'speed' the evidence supports only that driving over the speed limit was one of the many circumstances in place at the time of the crash," Bright ruled.View more book results for the query "*"
'Clearly Inappropriate': Why This Judge Slashed $24M Off of $26.2 Crash Verdict
"While plaintiff seeks to paint an almost demonic magnitude of intent centering around 'speed' the evidence supports only that driving over the speed limit was one of the many circumstances in place at the time of the crash," ruled Judge Gwendolyn Bright of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas.'Clearly Inappropriate': Why This Phila. Judge Slashed $24M Off of $26.2 Crash Verdict
"While plaintiff seeks to paint an almost demonic magnitude of intent centering around 'speed' the evidence supports only that driving over the speed limit was one of the many circumstances in place at the time of the crash," Bright ruled.Kayden's Law—A New Emphasis on 'The History of Abuse'
Kayden's Law represents needed but nonetheless sweeping changes to the way that courts and judges examine the huge responsibility of awarding child custody to parties when the risk of harm to a child is or could be at issue.'Delay and Pray': Short- and Long-Term Loan Accommodations and Workout Arrangements
"Operating under such regulatory edicts, lenders remain under pressure to triage underperforming and/or unrefinanceable loans without employing harsh enforcement mechanisms," according to Rosh Jaffe of CSG Law.Politicians With Social Media Accounts. Litigation Is Around the Block for Them—Literally
One of the most powerful tools on social media is the "block" feature. It allows a social media user to silence the haters and drown out the critics, while curating a more friendly social media feed. But after the U.S. Supreme Court decisions in Lindke v. Freed and O'Connor-Ratcliff v. Garnier, public officials across the country may have just lost their most powerful social media tool—and litigation is surely to follow.Trending Stories
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