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Three Key Lawyers Leave Kline & Specter
Thomas Kline and Shanin Specter spent 11 years with The Beasley Firm until departing to create their own firm, Kline & Specter.9th Circuit in the Strike Zone
Even as California Attorney General Bill Lockyer vows to appeal a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision overturning the state's Three Strikes sentencing law as cruel and unusual, 9th Circuit judges have scheduled a pair of cases that may extend the ruling. University of Southern California Law Professor Erwin Chemerinsky says he will argue the new cases, both scheduled for Dec. 12.After Client Adoption Files Blow Into Public View, Court Reprimands Attorney
An Indiana adoption lawyer whose client files were scattered in the wind after his adult children left boxes of them beside a recycling bin has received a public reprimand, his third in just over 10 years. The Indiana Supreme Court on Sept. 30 issued the reprimand against Steven Litz, whose Monrovia, Ind., practice focuses on adoption and criminal law. The court found that even if the documents had been placed into the bins, client confidentiality could have been breached.View more book results for the query "*"
Daily Decision Service Alert: Vol. 18, No. 43 ? March 5, 2009
Daily decision alert.People in the News - August 22, 2013
The Forum of Executive Women announced its new president, three officers and eight new directors for fiscal year 2013-14.Legal Fight Looms Over Med Mal Payouts
A courtroom showdown is scheduled for later this month over whether a New Jersey newspaper should have access to notices submitted to the state by insurance companies that pay medical malpractice settlements and verdicts.Latin America runs risk of boom-bust cycle, IMF official says
Latin American economies are at risk of overheating and must implement fiscal and currency policies to prevent a recurrence of the region's boom-bust cycle, an International Monetary Fund official said today.2nd Circuit: Public Has Right to Inspect Court Dockets
The press and public have a qualified First Amendment right to inspect court docket sheets, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday, reviving a case that had been brought by two newspapers challenging Connecticut state courts' decades-long practice of sealing files and, in some cases, refusing to acknowledge the cases even existed. The circuit remanded the case for more extensive discovery.Trending Stories
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