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Departure of London Tax Group Doesn't Faze Dorsey's Leadership
With new managing partner Ken Cutler preparing to jet to London as part of a firmwide confidence-building tour, Dorsey & Whitney—whose gross revenue dropped for the fifth straight year in 2012—lost its tax practice Monday in the U.K. capital to local commercial litigation boutique Hage Aaronson. Nonetheless, Cutler insists the Minneapolis-based Am Law 100 firm is poised for a comeback.Schnader Harrison Parts Ways With Boston Firm
Citing a "significant difference in operating philosophy," Philadelphia's Schnader Harrison Segal & Lewis is parting ways with Goldstein & Manello, the Boston firm it merged with in 2000. Earlier this year, Schnader Harrison lost key attorneys it had gained in a union with another Philadelphia firm. The mergers, which made Schnader Harrison one of the nation's fastest growing firms in 2000, are seen as disappointments by legal industry observers.High Court Rejects MTA's Bid to Expedite Appeal
The Court of Appeals said that a direct appeal "does not lie when questions other than the constitutional validity of a statutory provision are involved."Putting the sex in legal services
A racy billboard in Chicago declaring, �Life�s short. Get a divorce,� caused such an uproar that city workers stripped it from its downtown perch after a week- and other off-beat items.View more book results for the query "*"
Federal judge: NY violated rights of mentally ill
Senate Judiciary Committee Advances Bill To Increase Salaries of State Judges
NYU School of Law forms non-partisan think tank on regulation
New York University School of Law has formed the Institute for the Study of Regulation, a non-partisan advocacy group and think tank committed to promoting economic analysis of environmental, public health, and safety regulation. The law school's dean Richard Revesz will serve as the institute's faculty director. The institute plans to publish reports, policy briefs and papers and to work with non-governmental organizations and state and federal regulators.State to Pay $2.7 Million to Woman Wrongfully Imprisoned for 13 Years
Lynn DeJac Peters, whose conviction for killing her teenage daughter was overturned in 2007 on the basis of DNA evidence, initially sought more than $10 million in a written demand in 2009 but lowered the amount as time went on.Trending Stories
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