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Advice From a Wannabe Rainmaker
The concept of business development is yet another one of those things people don't learn in law school or while being summer associates. But even a dimwitted or somewhat lazy lawyer who squeezed into the law firm based on a recommendation from a relative can shoot to the upper echelons with this one skill set. Humor columnist The Snark says he has no idea how to develop business. But he's willing to share what he has witnessed over the years and offer some insight into the elusive rainmaking game.Tax Shelter Defense Seeks New Trial Over Juror's Hidden Identity
Counsel for former Jenkens & Gilchrist partners Paul Daugerdas and Donna Guerin and their co-defendants have charged that a juror at their trial for a massive illegal tax shelter scheme hid the fact that she had practiced law, had been suspended from practice for alcohol dependency and professional misconduct, that the Appellate Division had refused to reinstate her because of mental illness and that there was an outstanding warrant for her arrest.View more book results for the query "*"
Prosecutor Gets 6 Months in Drug Case
Former San Francisco Assistant District Attorney Robert Roland will still have a chance to keep his Bar card after he gets out of Lompoc.Former House speaker Hastert to join Dickstein Shapiro
Former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives J. Dennis Hastert will join Washington.'s Dickstein Shapiro LLP as senior advisor in the firm's government law & strategy group. Hastert will focus his practice on legislative and regulatory counseling.ACLU Seeks Plaintiff to Challenge Secret Hearings
The American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey is searching for a client to challenge the secrecy surrounding court hearings for Muslims detained by the INS since Sept. 11. The vast majority of hearings for "Special Interest Cases" -- Muslims detained on minor immigration violations until they're cleared by the FBI of any connection to terrorist activity -- have been held in Newark, N.J.Marriott drops blame-victim defense in Conn. rape
NEW HAVEN, Conn. AP - The Marriott hotel chain on Monday abandoned its legal claim that a Connecticut woman raped at gunpoint in a hotel parking garage, in front of her young children, had been careless and was partly at fault.The withdrawal followed days of backlash against Bethesda, Md.-based Marriott International Inc.Trending Stories
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