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June 22, 2001 | Law.com

McVeigh is Gone, and Already Forgotten

Timothy McVeigh's execution was only a short distraction in the anti-death penalty movement's renewed campaign for abolition. Despite the fact that things have not been going their way this year, this is the consensus among opponents of capital punishment, who view the remainder of 2001 as pivotal in their efforts to sway the 66 percent of Americans who still support execution.
6 minute read
May 23, 2011 | Daily Business Review

Justice Watch: Terrorism cases are tough to try on both sides

South Florida is again the backdrop for a terrorism case after charges were filed against the leader of a Miami mosque.
7 minute read
March 22, 2007 | New York Law Journal

Securities Law Liability

Israel Dahan and Jonathan Hoff, partners at Cadwalader, Wichersham & Taft, write that while the recent decision in Overton v. Todman & Co., CPAs establishes an auditor's "duty to correct" false or materially misleading statements contained in its report on a company's financial statements, the duty's application is limited.
11 minute read
December 08, 2010 | New York Law Journal

Partner Claims Gender Bias in Dewey's Compensation System

7 minute read
May 20, 2011 | Legaltech News

Rambus Loses Crucial Federal Circuit Ruling Over Destroyed Evidence

Some people argue that if we recover and discover every bit and byte of electronic information, then at trial we'll be able to arrive at a more perfect truth. Douglas J. Good responds by asking whether the search for more perfect justice by exhaustively unearthing electronic data is worth the cost -- and whether it's even effective.
4 minute read
December 01, 2005 | The American Lawyer

Conservatively Optimistic

No doubt about it, leaders of Am Law 200 firms are upbeat about the future. Eighty-nine percent of respondents to our annual firm leaders survey said they are optimistic about 2006, almost exactly the proportion who expressed optimism last year and the year before that. Only 11 percent of the respondents to our latest survey said they were uncertain about the future, and none said they were pessimistic.
10 minute read
February 07, 2005 | New Jersey Law Journal

Daily Decision Alert: Vol. 13, No. 25 � February 7, 2005

10 minute read
December 09, 2010 | Law.com

9th Circuit: Peruvian Natives' Tort Case Should Proceed in U.S. Courts

A 9th Circuit panel has overturned a ruling finding Peru to be the preferred jurisdiction for claims of environmental desecration and toxic torts against Occidental Petroleum. The panel wrote that Los Angeles, the Peruvian plaintiffs' chosen forum, is a sensible jurisdiction for the case.
4 minute read
February 17, 2012 | New Jersey Law Journal

Daily Decision Service Alert: Vol. 21, No. 34 - February 17, 2012

Daily decision alert.
16 minute read
March 12, 2013 | Daily Report Online

Med-mal expert doesn't have chops to save suit

The Court of Appeals of Georgia has upheld the dismissal of a medical malpractice suit over the death of a 10-month-old boy, saying the physician who verified the plaintiffs' complaint did not have enough experience in the area of medicine at issue to be considered an expert. Page Powell (above), who represented Children's Healthcare, said, "There'd be a lot of risk" of juror sympathy for plaintiffs in case of 10-month-old's death.
4 minute read

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