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May 12, 2000 | Law.com

Not Many Gays Filing Bias Suits

Supporters of federal legislation that would forbid employment discrimination based on sexual orientation are buoyed by a recent federal study showing that the bill, if passed, likely would not trigger a new wave of litigation. But the supporters also find that the study by the General Accounting Office does not appear to be helping them in their uphill fight to get the bill passed.
6 minute read
December 03, 2012 | Texas Lawyer

Social Media Savvy for General Counsel

Some employers vigilantly monitor communications among their employees to avoid the pitfalls associated with inappropriate communications. It is important for in-house counsel to know that, while the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) has been quick to file suit against employers in such cases, no court has yet to rule on the NLRB's interpretation of the National Labor Relations Act with respect to electronic communications of employees of private employers, writes Jay M. Wallace.
6 minute read
November 15, 2006 | Corporate Counsel

Good Fences Make Good Regulators

Government agencies with internal legal teams were put on notice Monday that ex parte communications between their staff prosecutors and decision makers are no longer allowed. That decision by the California Supreme Court will force several agencies, including the state attorney general's office, to institute policies to ensure that every case they handle is free of prosecutorial bias. Amici curiae, including the AG's office, had argued that such a ruling could be costly and disruptive.
4 minute read
Susan Brune of Brune & Richard and Dane Butswinkas of Williams & Connolly
Publication Date: 2009-11-12
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It's one of the oldest defenses in the book: My words were taken out of context. This time, it worked.

May 12, 2011 | Legaltech News

D.C. Discovery Violation So Extreme as to Be 'Literally Unheard Of'

In a scathing opinion, U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth accused Washington, D.C., of "repeated, flagrant, and unrepentant failures to comply with Court orders" in their handling of discovery in a six-year class action. Plaintiffs counsel informed Lamberth that city attorneys were continuing to "dump" thousands of e-mails and planned to continue releasing them after the trial.
5 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book New Jersey Business Litigation 2025 Authors: Paul A. Rowe, Andrea J. Sullivan View this Book

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November 12, 2003 | The Legal Intelligencer

House of Cardboard

With a $92.5 million settlement by the final and largest defendant, a class-action antitrust suit against the leading manufacturers of corrugated paper products has now resulted in combined settlements of more than $210 million -- the largest ever in a price-fixing case in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
7 minute read
February 15, 2011 | Daily Business Review

Propane gas customers settle over fees

Florida Public Utilities has reached a $790,000 settlement with customers charged unnecessary fees on their propane gas bills.
1 minute read
December 12, 2005 | Connecticut Law Tribune

Feds Battle Back

Anne Marie McGuire is locked in such a bitter feud with the Girl Scouts that she won't even buy their cookies. The Girl Scouts have blocked her East Haven driveway with a split rail fence and a pile of boulders to stop McGuire and her brother from driving on Sperry Lane, the private lane that leads to Camp Murray, a Girl Scout camp. The organization is also suing the siblings. The dispute started after McGuire and her brother each built a home seven years ago in back of their parents' home on a lot that fronts the Girl Scouts' private road. The siblings say, while their homes were being built, the town allowed them to share the town's easement, a claim East Haven officials deny. Girl Scout officials said they've had to contend with parked cars and construction trucks on Sperry Lane as a result of their new neighbors.
3 minute read
September 23, 2009 | The Legal Intelligencer

Prosecutor in Ohio criticizes execution delay

DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) ? A prosecutor seeking the GOP nomination for Ohio attorney general says the state was wrong when it failed to object to a ruling that delays the second lethal injection attempt of a death row inmate whose veins were unusable.
1 minute read
December 16, 2010 | The American Lawyer

Mark Cuban's Lawyers Respond to SEC in FOIA Fight

3 minute read

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