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December 18, 2009 | The Recorder

Hearsay

L.A. judges lecture on spending wisely, a solo wallows in success, and an associate's real luck was surviving 2009.
1 minute read
April 13, 2007 | New Jersey Law Journal

Ballard Spahr and Flaster Greenberg Hike First-Year Pay

The brief lull in associate salary increases ends as two firms announce $10,000 first-year bumps.
4 minute read
May 21, 2007 | The Legal Intelligencer

Legal Malpractice Dismissal Brings 1925(b) �Vagueness� Confusion

A Superior Court panel has affirmed the dismissal of a legal malpractice action brought against Fox Rothschild by two brothers who claimed the firm�s handling of a family will left their inheritance lighter than it should have been.
3 minute read
January 29, 2003 | Law.com

D.C. Confidential

There was no indication of the responsibility 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Senior Judge Edward Leavy was about to undertake when he was asked to be a part of the FISA Review Court's three-judge membership in the summer of 2001. The FISA Review Court had never even met in its 25-year history -- but the events of Sept. 11 changed everything. In September 2002, the FISA Review Court convened for the first time in an extraordinary three-hour hearing. Leavy agreed to be interviewed about the experience.
12 minute read
October 26, 2009 | Daily Report Online

Novelis to supply aluminum to Anheuser-Busch

ATLANTA AP - Privately held Novelis Inc. said Monday it signed a contract to continue supplying aluminum can sheets to beer maker Anheuser-Busch InBev NV for its North American operations.The value of the contract, which becomes effective Jan. 1, 2010, was not disclosed.The contract covers the supply of can body stock, can end stock and can tab stock for making aluminum beverage containers.
1 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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March 05, 2010 | Daily Report Online

House panel wants more Toyota acceleration details

WASHINGTON AP - A House committee on Friday questioned how rigorously Toyota has tested its vehicles for sudden acceleration, and asked the Japanese automaker for more records on the safety issues.The House Energy and Commerce Committee told Toyota executive Jim Lentz in a letter that there is "an absence of documents" to show whether the company thoroughly investigated the possibility of unintended acceleration.
3 minute read
July 12, 2002 | New York Law Journal

Woman Who Delayed Tax Protest Finds 9/11 Leeway Goes Only So Far

TROY The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks justify some leeway in various tax-related deadlines but only some an Administrative Law Judge has held.
4 minute read
January 09, 2006 | New York Law Journal

Criminal Law and Procedure

Abraham Abramovsky, a professor at the Fordham University School of Law, writes that in late December, the Court of Appeals revisited the elements of depraved indifference murder for the fifth time in three years. While it is likely not its' last decision on this topic, it is a seminal one, because the court finally struck a balance between the classic definition of depraved indifference to human life and the "objective" definition adopted over 20 years ago.
15 minute read
September 07, 1999 | Law.com

ICO Global's Cash Crunch Leads to Bankruptcy

Satellite-telephone provider ICO Global Communications Ltd. has been forced by a cash crunch to join the parade of multi-billion dollar companies that have sought protection in Delaware this year to reorganize themselves. ICO hoped to create the world's third global satellite-telephone network, but ended up following the footsteps of Iridium LLC, which decided to seek protection from creditors in Delaware two weeks earlier. Iridium was the first to offer satellite-telephone calling.
3 minute read
February 10, 2009 | Daily Report Online

Lawyer: Autopsy unclear on live birth

ATLANTA AP - A Mercer University law professor says a woman found guilty of murdering a baby she delivered on a toilet was unfairly convicted because the verdict hinged on a faulty confession.Sarah Gerwig-Moore, representing Kayla Ragan Wright of Crisp County, told the Georgia Supreme Court on Monday that the medical examiner could not determine if the girl was born alive in October 2004.
1 minute read

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