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Kentucky AG Can't Dodge Merck's Due Process Suit over Vioxx Contingency Counsel
Publication Date: 2012-12-20
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U.S. District Judge Danny Reeves in Kentucky first rejected the AG's bid to dismiss the case back in March, sustaining Merck's claims that the use of contingency fee attorneys violates its rights under the Fourteenth Amendment. On Wednesday, Reeves refused to toss the case yet again, handing another early-round victory to the company and its counsel at Skadden and Frost Brown Todd.

September 05, 1996 | Law.com

Daily Decision Alert: Vol. 4, No. 172 -- September 5, 1996

3 minute read
March 06, 2009 | New York Law Journal

Canada: Where They Punt on Third Down, But Don't Lay You Off

2 minute read
October 17, 2012 | The Recorder

Lair v. Bullock

6 minute read
January 31, 2013 | Corporate Counsel

Tribune Company Brings in New GC as it Emerges from Bankruptcy

The Tribune Company, having recently emerged from bankruptcy and tapped a new chief executive, announced the selection of former FCC official Edward Lazarus as its new general counsel.
3 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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August 21, 2000 | Law.com

Coaches Sue Web Sites, Claiming Team Playbooks Were Stolen

A Dallas Cowboys coach and three other coaches filed suit in Houston Friday against two Web sites alleging the sites sold stolen team playbooks online. The suit accuses the defendants of "wrongful appropriation and conversion of numerous confidential playbooks" and contends defendants "conducted a booming business in the sale of such pilfered playbooks . . . through their Web site."
2 minute read
November 10, 2004 | New York Law Journal

District Split: Arbitrators, Non-Parties, Pre-Hearing Discovery

David L. Elsberg, a member of Miller & Wrubel, writes that the legal limitations on prehearing discovery sometimes make little difference in practice and on occasion may be circumvented by creative litigants and arbitrators.
10 minute read
August 12, 2009 | New York Law Journal

Simels Case Goes to Jury

1 minute read
June 30, 2011 | The American Lawyer

Five Firms Fall in for Australian Military Housing Project

Four of Australia's Big Six firms are among the legal advisors on a $965 million housing project for the Australian Department of Defence.
2 minute read
January 10, 2005 | New York Law Journal

Criminal Law and Procedure

Abraham Abramovsky, a professor at the Fordham University School of Law and the director of the Fordham University International Criminal Law Center, wrties that, in many ways, the case at bar in People v. Carvajal, was a routine drug prosecution, with the defendant accused of three counts of cocaine possession. In at least one respect, however, the Carvajal case was anything but routine, because neither Mr. Carvajal nor the drugs he was accused of possessing were in New York.
11 minute read

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