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CLECenter.com Relaunches Website
The CLECenter.com website, an online provider of CLE programs, relaunched its website with new navigation and search facilities and an updated media player.Plaintiff Attorneys Told to Disclose Witness Identities in Bear Stearns Case
Southern District Judge Robert Sweet has ruled that plaintiffs lawyers cannot rely on the attorney work-product privilege to shield the identities of a group of confidential witnesses cited in a securities class action complaint.Recovery loses speed as consumers turn cautious
WASHINGTON AP - The recovery lost momentum in the spring as growth slowed to a 2.4 percent pace, its most sluggish showing in nearly a year and too weak to drive down unemployment.Consumers spent less, companies slowed their restocking of shelves and the nation's trade deficit dragged more on the economy in the April-to-June quarter.Prominent Arizona attorney killed in shooting rampage
The report of the shooting came in around dawn from a town in southwestern Arizona - the opening salvo in a rampage that left six people dead over the next six hours.The toll included the suspected gunman, 73-year-old Carey Hal Dyess, and the prominent Yuma attorney who represented his ex-wife in their divorce, Jerrold Shelley.Ruling Makes Bankruptcy Suits Harder
A recent Delaware Supreme Court decision may have undermined cases against directors and officers of companies for actions they take just before they file for bankruptcy, such as increasing the company's debt or signing major contracts with creditors. The court ruled in May that creditors of a Delaware corporation that is insolvent or in the "zone of insolvency" have no right to assert direct claims for breach of fiduciary duty against its directors.View more book results for the query "*"
Cleveland Rocks: Klayman Joins Ohio Firm
Larry Klayman, who made national headlines during the 1990s as a frequent legal opponent of the Clinton administration, is setting up shop in Miami with a Cleveland-based law firm.High Court's Docket Shrinks Again
In what was seen as a partial response to concerns about a shrinking docket, the Supreme Court in late September granted review in 17 cases, an unusually large number that helped fill its argument calendar for January and February. But one of those cases has been dismissed following a settlement between the U.S. government and a Somalian refugee. The settlement is unusual because the government is usually loath to scrub a case after the parties and the Court have devoted so much time and effort to it.Supreme Court Rules Hobbs Act Doesn't Outlaw Anti-Abortion Violence
Ending nearly 20 years of litigation, the Supreme Court on Tuesday ruled that the federal Hobbs Act does not outlaw the kind of violence that anti-abortion protesters have used to block access to abortion clinics nationwide. The ruling blunts a tool that clinics have used to win large financial damages against protesters. Justice Stephen Breyer wrote that Congress intended the Hobbs Act to cover violence associated with more commerce-related crimes of robbery and extortion, not abortion protests.Trending Stories
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