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Reed Smith Holds Back Partner Pay for Legacy Firm's Nonequity Rank
Legacy Richards Butler salaried partners at Reed Smith are to have 20 percent of their annual pay held back at the start of next year, as part of a package of measures designed to tie them into the firm and bill more quickly. The salaried partners will be paid the final portion of their remuneration at the end of the year. "Since we introduced this system we have improved our performance in terms of getting bills collected," says partner Michael Pollack. But the move has been criticized by other partners.Arizona gov. signs bill targeting ethnic studies
PHOENIX (AP) - Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer has signed a bill targeting a school district's ethnic studies program, hours after a report by United Nations human rights experts condemned the measure.NJ Senate OKs gay marriage bill in milestone vote
TRENTON, N.J. AP - New Jersey lawmakers gave their blessing to legalizing gay marriage for the first time Monday as the state Senate passed a bill that would allow nuptials for same-sex couples, despite Gov. Chris Christie's insistence that he will veto such legislation.The Senate's 24-16 vote sends the bill to the Assembly, which is expected to pass it on Thursday.View more book results for the query "*"
In Down Economy, Midsized Firms Make Their Move
Coming soon to a major city near you: new branch offices launched by midsized law firms.White House Lawyers Girding for Leak Investigation
As the Justice Department probe into who disclosed the identity of a CIA officer proceeds, White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales and his 10-lawyer staff will be tasked with answering investigators' demands for documents and interviews. The lawyers involved will have to make decisions about what to hand over and what to shield -- sticky issues for an administration that has been unyielding on assertions of executive privilege.M.V.B. Collision v. Allstate Insurance
Plaintiff Found to Have Had Legitimate Purpose in Acquiring AssignmentAndersen Defense Suggests Duncan Pressured to Testify
Defense attorney Russell "Rusty" Hardin Jr. is doing his best to portray former Arthur Andersen auditor David Duncan, the government's key witness in Andersen's obstruction of justice trial, as an innocent family man who was pressured to plead guilty to a crime and testify for the government. Hardin's cross-examination of Duncan is the key exchange in the 2-week-old trial in federal court in Houston.Trending Stories
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