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August 19, 2009 | New York Law Journal

Realty Law Digest

Scott E. Mollen, a partner at Herrick, Feinstein and an adjunct professor at St. John's University School of Law, analyzes recent decisions, including a ruling where a record of text messages between the parties was allowed as evidence of a fully executed lease and another where a penalty was imposed on a landlord for the false certification of correction of lead-based paint violations.
13 minute read
January 10, 2006 | New Jersey Law Journal

Daily Decision Alert: Vol. 14, No. 6 - January 10, 2006

10 minute read
April 02, 2003 | Law.com

Are Journalists Public Figures?

A defamation suit in Monmouth County, N.J., is testing whether a news reporter is a public figure who must prove actual malice in order to prevail. The defense, raised by former Deputy Public Defender Robert Tarver in a suit against him by an Asbury Park Press reporter, appears to be one of first impression in New Jersey -- perhaps fitting for a libel suit that is itself highly unusual.
4 minute read
February 24, 2011 | Corporate Counsel

Ex-GlaxoSmithKline In-House Lawyer Wants Any Co-Conspirators From King & Spalding Named

The case of former GlaxoSmithKline in-house lawyer Lauren Stevens, who was indicted for allegedly obstructing a federal probe into off-label marketing of a drug, is beginning to look a lot like one of those old Mad Magazine spoofs of Spy vs. Spy vs. Spy.
5 minute read
October 17, 2007 | The Recorder

SEC Tells Marvell, Exec to Expect Suits

The backdating-plagued semiconductor maker and one of its prime executives have received Wells notices � meaning securities investigators plan to seek financial penalties.
4 minute read
January 05, 2004 | Law.com

Sky-High Headaches

Today Orville and Wilbur Wright are acknowledged as the fathers of flight, the quintessential inventors. But the Wright brothers were hardly enamored of the American legal system. They railed against the delays it allowed and the expense it required. One hundred years after the first flight at Kitty Hawk, aviation has progressed to an almost unfathomable degree. From the look of things, patent litigation has not.
7 minute read
August 17, 2006 | National Law Journal

Privilege feud flares up in Calif. federal courts

Over the past month or so � at a time when dozens of companies are waiving privilege in connection with wide-ranging stock options investigations � the privilege debate in California's federal courts has taken a blue-collar turn.
7 minute read
August 16, 2010 | Law.com

How the Miracle of E-Mail Works

What you see when you open a message in Outlook or Gmail isn't just a snapshot of what someone sent you. It's a report, generated by a query that returns information culled from a complex dataset. "Dude, your e-mails are a database," writes attorney Craig Ball. Here's how it works.
6 minute read
October 09, 2000 | The Legal Intelligencer

In Chambers

President Judge Joseph A. Smyth: Personal History* Born April 7, 1945. * Married to Teri Smyth with three children. * University of Notre Dame, B.A. 1967. * Villanova University Law School, J.D., 1971.
7 minute read
April 14, 2003 | Law.com

An Ex-CIA Officer's Long, Long Wait

6 minute read

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