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February 20, 2006 |

Firms Put Private Investigators On The Payroll

In a perfect world, firms could employ private investigators who are as skilled as pseudo-bumbling television police detective Columbo.
3 minute read
July 19, 2004 |

Effort to Add Amendments Misuses Time and Taxpayer Money

U.S. Sen. John Cornyn has been out and about vigorously advocating various amendments to the U.S. Constitution in what is an exercise in disingenuous polemics, with a flawed rendition of American constitutional history.
5 minute read
July 26, 2013 |

'Myriad' Aftermath: What Remains Patent Eligible?

Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft partner Dorothy R. Auth writes: The Supreme Court's recent holding sent shock waves throughout the biotech IP community not only because the court invalidated a class of commonly issued patent claims, but also because it established a bright-line distinction between naturally and non-naturally occurring compounds. However, a calmer reading of 'Myriad' reveals that its reach may be more limited than first reported.
7 minute read
July 24, 2006 |

Commonwealth v. In re D.S.

Because the juvenile was actually 15 years old when he allegedly committed robbery and aggravated assault with a handgun, the Juvenile Court should have granted the commonwealth's petition to transfer the matter, on jurisdictional grounds, to the criminal court division. Vacated and remanded.
1 minute read
April 01, 2011 |

Judge tosses suit vs. county in Pa. girl's death

ERIE, Pa. (AP) - A lawsuit against child welfare officials filed by the estate of a mentally disabled Pennsylvania girl who died after being repeatedly beaten by her adoptive mother has been tossed by a federal judge.
2 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Pennsylvania Causes of Action, 12th Edition Authors: GAETAN J. ALFANO, RONALD J. SHAFFER, JOSHUA C. COHAN View this Book

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September 19, 2003 |

Strange Bedfellows

Matt Reed was strolling through a fashion trade show in London when a T-shirt display stopped him in his tracks. Reed, a co-founder and business director of Oakland's Cosmic Debris, had caught someone selling a knock-off of the company's "Emily the Strange" T-shirt. "Emily's" surge in popularity has kept Cosmic Debris and its lawyers scrambling to protect the company's trademarks and copyrights and illustrates the problems a small company can face when it launches a popular product.
5 minute read
September 04, 2006 |

Stock Option Backdate Probe Hits N.J. Firms

An SEC investigation into stock options sweeps up four New Jersey companies and spurs a shareholder's derivative suit.
6 minute read
May 29, 2013 |

DeKalb Prosecutor Strikes Out On His Own

DeKalb prosecutor Tunde Akinyele has left the DeKalb County district attorney's office for private practice.
5 minute read
Paul Weiss Prevails for Hedge Fund in Dispute with Founding Member
Publication Date: 2009-05-19
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Hedge funds are typically about as transparent as New York's East River. What happens in Greenwich, stays in Greenwich. Unless there's a lawsuit, of course. Like the one brought against Greenwich-based Viking Global Investors and two of its founders, Andreas Halvorsen and David Ott, by the third founder, Brian Olson. Last week Delaware vice-chancellor Stephen Lamb entered judgment for the defendants, leaving Olson with nothing.

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