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Daily Decision Alert -- Vol. 13, No. 67 - April 6, 2005
Proposed Notice for Class Action Gets Cold Shoulder
The class notification procedures proposed by plaintiffs and defendants in a class action against the manufacturers of Cold-Eeze brand zinc lozenges have been disapproved by a Philadelphia Common Pleas Court judge. Notably, Judge Albert W. Sheppard ruled that the defendant manufacturer is not required to post notice of the suit to potential class members on its Web site.Board of Adjustment of the City of Piney Point Village v. Solar
When there is no evidence of harm to any interest and the undisputed evidence shows that failure to grant the request will deprive the property owners of the ability to swim on their property, it is an abuse of discretion to deny the variance.Trial ordered over firm's distribution of fen-phen settlement
A New York judge has ordered a trial to determine whether the law firm that negotiated a massive settlement with the maker of the fen-phen diet drug violated ethical rules by apportioning the settlement in a way designed to inflate the firm's share of the funds. The drug maker settled the suit under confidential terms, but the settlement has been estimated to exceed $1 billion.Schumer to Roberts: Come Prepared to Answer Tough Questions
Sen. Charles Schumer said Thursday that Supreme Court nominee John Roberts should not use Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg as a role model at his confirmation hearing next week. Republicans say Ginsburg declined to answer senators' questions 55 times at her Judiciary Committee hearing. "If Judge Roberts repeatedly resorts to the so-called 'Ginsburg Precedent,' it will sound less like a principled refusal to answer and more like a variation on the Fifth Amendment," Schumer said.View more book results for the query "*"
Full-time firm job: finding square footage
With the size of law firms ballooning, finding room to grow has become a full-time endeavor at some firms. Greenberg Traurig's Robert Ivanhoe spends up to 1,000 hours each year handling his firm's own commercial real estate demands, which have exploded since 2001.Eternal Asia Supply Chain Management (USA) v. EQD
'First-to-File' Doctrine Cited in Dismissal; Claims May Be Asserted in California DistrictSenator Keeps Up Critique of Southern District Nominee
San Joaquin Judge Stripped of Robes After CJP Inquiry
The Commission on Judicial Performance ordered San Joaquin County Superior Court Judge Michael Platt removed from the bench Monday for fixing traffic tickets and trying to influence cases before other judges. Platt was found to have committed misconduct on four counts of ticket fixing, and three counts of attempting to influence other judges. In its decision, the judicial watchdog agency said Platt went out of his way to fix tickets for friends.Trending Stories
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