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December 07, 2010 | Law.com

Continental Guilty in Concorde Crash, French Court Rules

A French court has convicted Continental Airlines and one of its mechanics of manslaughter for setting off a chain of events that sent a supersonic Concorde crashing into a hotel outside Paris a decade ago, killing 113 people. Both mechanic John Taylor and the airline said they would appeal.
6 minute read
March 10, 2011 | Daily Report Online

Katie Holmes' lawyer explains rationale behind defamation suit

Katie Holmes filed a $50 million libel lawsuit on March 1 against American Media Inc., the publisher of Star Magazine, after the tabloid published an article in its Jan. 31 issue insinuating that she had a drug addiction. The headline of the cover story was "Addiction Nightmare - Katie Drug Shocker - The Real Reason She Can't Leave Tom," referring to husband Tom Cruise.
8 minute read
June 13, 2001 | Law.com

FTC Chair Muris: Show Me the Numbers

In his first public address as chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, Timothy J. Muris said that all merger reviews under his watch will revolve around empirical and quantitative analysis, while adding that the agency's goal remains protecting consumers. "Regarding antitrust, we must have solid economic analysis that is firmly grounded in facts and real-world institutions," he said.
4 minute read
November 25, 2012 | The American Lawyer

City Adamant in Defense of Police, D.A.s in Jogger Case

Ten years ago, a Manhattan judge vacated the convictions of five men for raping and beating a jogger in Central Park. For almost the entire time since then, the city and the five have battled—with no hint of compromise—over the men's allegations that they were the victims of a malicious prosecution.
12 minute read
May 15, 2008 | Daily Report Online

NY prosecutor wins big with Spitzer investigation

NEW YORK AP - Michael Garcia's predecessors as U.S. attorney in Manhattan took on all five mob families, the titans of Wall Street, Osama bin Laden and even Martha Stewart. So it was largely unnoticed when Garcia wanted to attack public corruption.Then his public corruption unit investigated a prostitution ring that took down former New York Gov.
4 minute read
October 11, 2004 | Law.com

NYU Law Center Publishes 'Torture Memos'

Myriad so-called "torture memos" providing legal justification for the brutal military interrogation of terror suspects, starkly demonstrated at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison, have been published by the Center on Law and Security at New York University School of Law. In her introduction to "Torture: Volumes I-IV," Karen J. Greenberg, the center's executive director, comes to a troubling conclusion about policy developed by U.S. government lawyers.
5 minute read
June 06, 2006 | National Law Journal

Winstead Lawyer Reveals Real-Life Lessons From Competing on 'The Apprentice'

Texas appellate lawyer Roxanne Wilson can finally reveal the details of what she was up to during her mysterious two-month absence last fall from Winstead Sechrest & Minick. She was one of 18 candidates competing for a chance to work for real estate developer Donald Trump on "The Apprentice." And although The Donald fired her, Wilson says she's proud she made it to the final four. Besides, she says she learned three big things from the experience, all of which are useful in her life back at the law firm.
8 minute read
June 03, 2013 | The Recorder

Long-Running Lead Paint Suit Clears Hurdle

4 minute read
November 21, 2008 | Daily Report Online

Mukasey returns to work after collapse

WASHINGTON AP - With briefcase in hand and a smile on his face, Attorney General Michael Mukasey returned to work Friday after collapsing during a speech the night before and spurring a 14-hour scare about his health.A Justice Department spokeswoman blamed the 67-year-old's dramatic and public fall on a fainting spell.
4 minute read
March 24, 2004 | Law.com

A Killer Called 'Youngster'

Nine years after killing a woman and sexually assaulting the victim's mother, Texas death row inmate Anzel Keon Jones is hoping the U.S. Supreme Court will decide that executing someone who committed crimes while under 18 is unconstitutional. At least one other Texas execution has been halted pending a decision, and Jones' attorney expects all 27 of the state's death row inmates who were under 18 at the time of their crimes to seek stays.
14 minute read

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