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Stories and case digests on notable rulings and key issues, and how to navigate frequent problems, "warning stories" about what not to do
By Jenna Greene | April 17, 2017
Here's a travel ban case with a twist: live witnesses in court. On Tuesday, a federal judge in Washington, D.C. will allow testimony from witnesses including a Sheppard Mullin partner. The move seems distinctly advantageous to the plaintiffs, represented by an army of lawyers from Arnold & Porter.
1 minute read
By Charles Toutant | April 13, 2017
Roxane Laboratories must pay legal fees and costs for two defendants after filing a patent infringement suit that was "exceptionally meritless," a federal judge in Newark has ruled.
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By P.J. D'Annunzio | April 11, 2017
Federal prosecutors in Western Pennsylvania tried and failed two times to get a conviction for a felon's possession of a gun, and now a federal judge is denying their request for a third bite at the apple.
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Delaware Business Court Insider
By Tom McParland | April 10, 2017
A U.S. magistrate judge in Delaware has recommended that the court transfer a suit against Occidental Chemical Corp. related to toxic pesticide exposure to New York federal court, finding a lack of jurisdiction in Delaware.
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Delaware Business Court Insider
By Tom McParland | April 7, 2017
A lawyer for Nova Chemicals Corp. on Thursday asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit to undo a $2.5 million award of attorney fees to Dow Chemical Co., its opponent in a long-running patent dispute, which the Canadian plastics and chemicals firm had accused of perpetrating fraud against the court.
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By Max Mitchell | April 6, 2017
Wal-Mart has agreed to settle claims that it negligently sold ammunition to a drunken 20-year-old, who later used it in a fatal shooting spree.
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By Scott Graham | April 5, 2017
Exploring uncharted territory, U.S. District Judge James Donato on Wednesday agreed to postpone a computer hacking trial for three months while the plaintiff seeks new sources of litigation funding.
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By Max Mitchell | April 3, 2017
Litigants before the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review can hire just about anyone they want to represent them before the board, as long as that person is not an attorney whose license has been suspended, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has ruled.
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