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Alito's First Day on High Court a Busy One
New Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito Jr.'s first day on the bench Tuesday was an unusually busy one. The Court heard arguments in key environmental cases, issued a ruling involving freedom of religion, and granted review in a new case that will put the justices back in the center of the national abortion rights debate.Social Gaming Suits Are Serious Business
Social gaming -- online games that use social media sites such as Facebook and MySpace as platforms -- is a lucrative market whose practices are ripe for litigation. Legal questions surround "fast following," the sector's practice of quickly copying competitors' successful gaming concepts.$2.8M lawyer malpractice verdict set aside
In a long-running legal malpractice case, the Supreme Court of Georgia has upended a $2.8 million verdict against Dahlonega lawyer Steven Leibel, finding that both the Georgia Court of Appeals and the trial judge made errors in the case.Historic Warren County Courthouse Will Be Renovated, Not Replaced
Almost a decade after Warren County's assignment judge declared courthouse facility improvement "the number one priority in this vicinage," the county freeholder board is taking action.Law Firm Boyd & Jenerette Leaving Miami Market
Two years after launching a Miami office, Jacksonville-based Boyd & Jenerette is pulling out of the market this month.View more book results for the query "*"
Firefighter Reinstated After N-Word Faux Pas
No matter how regrettable, New Haven firefighter Carol LaCroix's use of the N-word to publicly introduce a speaker from the United Negro College Fund, New Haven Superior Court Judge Patty Jenkins Pitman is convinced, was an inadvertent slip of the tongue.In re: Initial Public Offering Securities Litigation
Information Requested by Underwriters Is Not Protected by Work-Product DoctrineEEOC Sues Outback Steakhouse for Keeping Women out of Kitchen
The Outback Steakhouse restaurant chain was sued Friday by the EEOC, which accused the company of denying women job opportunities and training needed to reach top management jobs. To be considered for those jobs, workers need to have varied assignments, especially in the kitchen, the suit states. But qualified women were denied those posts and passed over for less qualified males. The case "turns on its head the stereotype that women should 'stay in the kitchen,'" an EEOC attorney said in a statement.Kids in Legal Limbo Could Find Help In 'Dead Dad's Bill'
After Robert Netting died of cancer in early 1995, his widow successfully underwent in-vitro fertilization with sperm he had deposited for her. But a year later, when Rhonda Gillett-Netting filed for Social Security benefits in Arizona for the twins she bore, her request was denied.9/11 Theorists Hit With $15,000 in Sanctions
Three lawyers and their client who claim that Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and other Bush administration officials orchestrated the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks piled one mistake on top of another on their way to being sanctioned by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.Trending Stories
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