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July 26, 2004 | Texas Lawyer

Lovick v. Ritemoney Ltd.

Under the Texas Credit Services Organization Act, read in conjunction with the usury statutes, brokerage fees shared with the lender are interest for the purpose of determining usury.
5 minute read
February 17, 2005 | New Jersey Law Journal

Vol. 13, No. 33 � February 17, 2005

12 minute read
January 10, 2012 | New Jersey Law Journal

Daily Decision Service Alert: Vol. 21, No. 7 - January 10, 2012

Daily decision alert.
16 minute read
July 15, 2002 | The Legal Intelligencer

`Self-Critical Analysis` Bar Fails to Shield Prison Report

The self-critical analysis privilege cannot be used in a civil rights suit to protect against disclosure of a report detailing the investigation of a high-ranking prison guard where there is no proof that disclosure would chill witnesses in future investigations, and the report has already been disclosed to two plaintiffs` lawyers, a federal magistrate judge has ruled.
5 minute read
April 23, 2013 | The Legal Intelligencer

It is unethical for insurance defense firms to submit legal bills to third-party auditors

Is it ethical for insurance defense law firms to submit legal bills to a third-party auditing service and participate in "legal service programs" whereby an insurer may limit an attorney's representation or defense of the client, the insured?
11 minute read
May 04, 2000 | Law.com

Lawyer in the Running for Olympic Trials

Long distance runners be warned: you can't outrun the long arm of the law -- at least not when the lawyer is Ellen FitzGerald, an assistant attorney general in the New York State Department of Law whose burgeoning career as a competitive marathoner is on track to the 2004 Olympic Trials.
5 minute read
September 11, 2006 | The Legal Intelligencer

Civil 'CSI'

Everyone has heard of computer searches, and we've all seen some version of them in films or on television, usually when criminal investigations are depicted. Civil litigators, however, may have a hard time seeing how computer searches fit into their case
6 minute read
January 06, 2011 | New York Law Journal

Fashion Faux Pas: Gucci's Lawyer Wasn't Exactly a Lawyer, But That's OK

4 minute read
May 15, 2012 | The Recorder

Alsup to Boies: I Can Code -- Can You?

6 minute read
September 08, 2009 | Law.com

2nd Circuit Upholds Fee Award but Remands for Recalculation

A finding of "subjective bad faith" is not a prerequisite for an award of attorney fees in a dismissed market manipulation case subject to a 1995 law designed to curb frivolous securities claims, a unanimous 2nd Circuit panel has ruled. However, while upholding a district court judge's finding that the defendants were entitled to a fee award, the panel found that, in the absence of a bad faith finding, the judge nevertheless had to re-examine his award of nearly $70,000 to determine if it was reasonable.
5 minute read

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