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Justice Dept. Moves to Halt POW suits against Iraq
The Justice Department has asked a judge to throw out a $959 million judgment levied against Iraq for torturing American prisoners of war in 1991 -- arguing that President Bush has recently granted the country sovereign immunity from actions committed by the Saddam Hussein regime. The move on July 21 surprised lawyers representing 17 former U.S. soldiers and their families and threatens at least two other pending civil cases against Iraq.Insurance Firm Nelson Levine Opens D.C. Office
Nelson Levine de Luca & Horst, a Pennsylvania insurance law firm, announced Tuesday the opening of a Washington office in response to recent moves to expand the federal government's regulatory role in the industry's modernization.Perfect Storm Spawns A Supreme Scandal
It all started with a note quietly passed from one judge to another.New Jersey Eye Surgeon Fires Slander Suit at Lawyer for Plaintiff-Courting Ads
A rare suit by a physician against a lawyer is being waged on the frontier that state regulators and the courts created when they allowed doctors and lawyers to advertise in the mass media. A New Jersey eye surgeon -- Joseph Dello Russo -- who advertised on radio and TV has filed a defamation claim against an attorney who used a newspaper ad to gather clients for a malpractice claim against Dello Russo.View more book results for the query "*"
When an artist creates an iconic poster using a photograph taken by someone else, who owns the work? Shepard Fairey, the artist and guerilla marketer who designed the ubiquitous two-toned HOPE poster of President Barack Obama, has an answer: the artist. He's hired Stanford's Anthony Falzone, but the Associated Press--which took the photo that's the basis of Fairey's poster--has brought in its own big gun.
Central New York Fair Business Association v. Salazar
Land's Acceptance Into Trust for Indian Nation Cannot Be Deemed Racially Discriminatory ActAppeals Added in the New Jersey Supreme Court, February 26, 2007
Notice to the bar.Answering the Call: Texas Democratic Lawyers Join Effort to Protect the Vote
Get-out-the-attorney drives are being held in cities acorss Texas, with the hope that 1,000 Texas Democratic lawyers will enlist for legal service and go -- at their own expense -- to one of 10,000 contested precincts around the country. "We will not have an attorney-client relationship with the campaign or represent it in court proceedings," Barbara Saylers says. "We will help monitor the polls and watch for election law violations."Trending Stories
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