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February 10, 2003 | Law.com

Juries Less Tolerant of IP Crime

Juries appeared to have grown less tolerant of intellectual property crimes last year, and they voted more than $641 million to prove it. That's how much juries awarded in patent, copyright and trade secret cases on The National Law Journal's list of top verdicts, more than double the comparable amount in 2001.
3 minute read
July 30, 2008 | Law.com

Innovation Can Lead to More Business for Firms

One thing consultant Stacy West Clark hears from many law firms today is that their revenues are flatlined or falling. Consequently, they are eager to know where and how they should spend their marketing dollars. Clark discusses the results of the 2008 Survey of National Market Awareness for Law Firms -- in which the top law firms were praised for their innovative marketing techniques -- and explains how other firms can apply their techniques to gain more business.
6 minute read
December 18, 2009 | New York Law Journal

Charles v. Suvannavejh

Deceased Child's Short Lifespan Does Not Allow For Loss of Child's Services Claim
1 minute read
February 18, 2008 | National Law Journal

White & Case's Lamm to Head ABA

It has been 50 years since a lawyer from the nation's capital has presided over the American Bar Association. That drought will end next year, when White & Case D.C. partner and international trade litigator Carolyn Lamm takes the helm of the 413,000-member association.
2 minute read
October 27, 2008 | Texas Lawyer

To Secure or Protect: Parties Prepare to Ensure Compliance With Election Laws

Texas lawyers, both Democrats and Republicans, are turning up at early-polling stations statewide and in other key battleground states. Most of the volunteers visit and monitor the polling stations to provide "ballot security" (the Republicans' term) and "voter protection" (the Democrats' preferred moniker). Jonathan Neerman chairs the Dallas County Republican Party.
6 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Pennsylvania Causes of Action, 12th Edition Authors: GAETAN J. ALFANO, RONALD J. SHAFFER, JOSHUA C. COHAN View this Book

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May 04, 2010 | New Jersey Law Journal

New Jersey Manufacturers Ins. Co. v. National Casualty Co.

An insurer against which a Rova Farms claim is established is only liable for prejudgment interest above its policy limit for the period of time following the insurer's breach of its duty of good faith in settlement negotiations.
6 minute read
July 02, 2010 | The Legal Intelligencer

I Was Gonna Go to Work, But Then I Got Fired (for Getting High)

The right to smoke pot for health reasons while not on the job has triggered a lawsuit against Wal-Mart Stores Inc. A Michigan man on Tuesday sued the retail giant in state court, alleging he was wrongfully fired for using medical marijuana to treat the pain of an inoperable brain tumor and cancer. Medical marijuana is legal in Michigan.
3 minute read
August 03, 2006 | Law.com

No Malpractice Insurance? You Must Tell

A new Massachusetts regulation requiring attorneys to divulge whether they carry malpractice insurance raises questions about the burden on solo practitioners and small firms. Roughly 15 percent to 20 percent of Massachusetts lawyers lack insurance, which can be elusive as well as costly. One intellectual property solo practitioner turned to Minnesota Lawyers Mutual Insurance to insure her Boston-based practice because, as she puts it, "There isn't an insurer in Massachusetts who will touch" IP solos.
3 minute read
May 07, 2007 | Daily Report Online

Former President Clinton among many paying tribute to Young

ATLANTA AP - Former President Bill Clinton called Andrew Young a profoundly good man as hundreds paid tribute to the civil rights legend in honor of his 75th birthday."You were given by God great gifts," Clinton said. "Many people have gifts. The test is what you do with them and whether you care about others who deserve their chance in life, who either don't have your gifts or didn't have your opportunities.
2 minute read
August 13, 2010 | Law.com

9th Circuit Says Suit Against Spain Over Pissarro Painting Can Proceed

In a 9-2 en banc ruling Thursday, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court decision allowing a suit over a Camille Pissarro masterpiece confiscated from its owner by a Nazi official in 1939 to proceed against Spain and the state art foundation now in possession of the painting. The suit was filed in 2005 in the Central District of California by an American whose Jewish grandmother sold the Impressionist painting in exchange for being allowed by the Nazis to leave Berlin safely.
4 minute read

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