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Prosecutor Says Quattrone's Innocence Claim Contradicted
In his closing argument Tuesday, Assistant U.S. Attorney David B. Anders said Frank Quattrone's claim of innocence was contradicted by abundant evidence the star investment banker knew a federal grand jury and the Securities and Exchange Commission were closing in on his Global Technology Group at Credit Suisse First Boston when he strongly suggested that people in the group follow the bank's document retention policy.Appeals Court Clears Way for Trial Bonner Aborted
Jonathan [email protected] County may retry a hit-and-run defendant even though a judge last year dismissed the case in mid-trial for lack of prosecution, the Georgia Court of Appeals has ruled.Unless the Georgia Supreme Court intervenes, the ruling clears the way to complete a case that Fulton Superior Court Judge Alice D.Daily Decision Service Alert: Vol. 20, No. 107 - June 6, 2011
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Shearman Sees Double With Twin Second-Years
Identical twin sisters Tatziana and Diana Paraguacuto-Maheo graduated summa cum laude from Marid's leading university, then magna cum laude from the Sorbonne, then picked up Fulbright scholarships and LL.M.s from Columbia Law School, and wound up together as associates at Shearman & Sterling. What's behind their parallel successes? "Well, we know what we want," said Tatziana. "We believe in perseverance." That and being side by side.Students sue in copyright infringement challenge
A pair of third-year students at the University of Maine School of Law are defending two college students who've been sued for copyright infringement by the Recording Industry Association of America. Lisa Chmelecki and Hannah Ames argue that digital information used by the recording industry to bring the lawsuits falls short of a new legal standard set by the U.S. Supreme Court.Calif. Federal Judge Blasts Gang Prosecutors
At a Tuesday hearing in a capital gang case, Northern District of California Judge William Alsup said that the prosecutors' tactics are "slippery," making a "bogus argument," and "inviting the court to make an error." The judge said he plans to exclude from the case a bevy of witnesses, some of whom have key testimony. Alsup's wrath had been building for months, since it became clear that prosecutors had decided not to comply with an order to turn over key evidence, including witness names.Trending Stories
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