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Wine 'em, dine 'em -- and sign 'e
Lawyer Tim Zagat and his lawyer wife, Nina, have made a pretty good living publishing their eponymous surveys of the best restaurants in major cities across the country and around the world. The National Law Journal asked Mr. Zagat to turn his knowledge of eateries to the task of rainmaking and to come up with some rules for picking a good restaurant at which to woo a potential or existing client, along with a list of such places he thinks fit the bill.Opinion Letters Become Flash Point for Privilege Dispute
In oral arguments on Wednesday, the California Supreme Court will be asked to decide whether factual information -- such as witness statements and fact summaries -- is as privileged in opinion letters as the legal advice being given. Specifically, the court will be asked to decide whether trial court judges may conduct in camera reviews of opinion letters and then share redacted versions of them with the opposing party.Connecticut To Share In $1.5 Billion Drug Settlement
Connecticut will receive $6 million as part of a massive $1.5 billion civil and criminal health care fraud settlement between a large pharmaceutical company and federal and state governments over allegations the company promoted a drug for unauthorized uses.Despite odds, death sought in UNC student slaying
HILLSBOROUGH, N.C. AP - Prosecutors know they face long odds when trying to persuade jurors to recommend executing the sole defendant eligible for capital punishment in the killing of University of North Carolina's student body president.But for a crime that led thousands to gather for one memorial service after another for Eve Carson, they're willing to try twice, both in state and federal court.View more book results for the query "*"
Weinberg Holdings v. Ruru & Associates
Tenant Granted 'Yellowstone' Injunction Staying, Tolling Cure Period in Default NoticeSupreme Court Refuses to Consider Adult Web Site's Anti-Piracy Lawsuit
The Supreme Court on Dec. 3 refused to consider an appeal by an online publisher that claims credit-card companies are enabling the piracy of its pictures of nude models. The case was brought by Perfect 10 Inc., which until recently published an adult magazine and also operates Perfect10.com. The company said in court papers that its business has been severely harmed by pirate Web sites, many of them overseas, which have used images of its nude models without authorization.Former Board of Bar Examiners Chair Jailed, Fined for Land-Flipping Role
Stanley Yacker, former chairman of the state Board of Bar Examiners, was sentenced to 18 months in prison and ordered to pay $787,985 in restitution last Monday for his role in a land-flipping schemeJobless claims rise less than expected
Claims for U.S. unemployment benefits rose less than forecast last week to a level that shows companies may be starting to slow the pace of dismissals.Trending Stories
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