The latest from National Law Journal - Washington
- Comcast is hiring lobbyists
- After 19 years, a trial
- For Chinese-Americans, a chance for an apology
- Anita Hill lands new D.C. job
- INADMISSIBLE
- Federal Circuit upholds sanctions over patent suits brought in 'bad faith'
- Glenn Archer, former Federal Circuit chief judge, dies at 82
- Judicial nominee stalls after Kansas senator's flip
- COURTSIDE: Newest justices join cert pool
- Roberts Court extends line of permissive First Amendment rulings in video game case
- For business, a big week at Court
- Top British law firms navigating D.C. waters
- A question of contempt
- Mistrial result of blunder, experts agree
Comcast is hiring lobbyists | Top |
With the completion of the Comcast-NBC Universal merger in January, Washington lobbyists are part of a growing cadre representing the media giant on intellectual property matters. | |
After 19 years, a trial | Top |
Texas businessman William Moore Jr. has spent nearly two decades trying to reclaim his reputation after the government unsuccessfully charged him in a conspiracy to win a multimillion-dollar government contract. | |
For Chinese-Americans, a chance for an apology | Top |
Covington & Burling's Martin Gold is leading an effort to pressure Congress to approve resolutions expressing regret for passing laws that discriminated against the Chinese. | |
Anita Hill lands new D.C. job | Top |
As the 20th anniversary approaches of one of the most polarizing U.S. Supreme Court confirmation sessions in recent times, Anita Hill, who accused Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment, is back with a law firm in Washington. | |
INADMISSIBLE | Top |
Wone family settles; Bradbury throws in with Mitt; Legal Aid fundraiser surpasses goal; back to the beginning for Bloch; Gossett moves to CFPC; Hogan Lovells helps free one of the Norfolk Four; and Snyder's SLAPP fight in this week's column. | |
Federal Circuit upholds sanctions over patent suits brought in 'bad faith' | Top |
The decision discussed the inequities involving companies that use their patents solely to demand licenses or bring suits, sometimes referred to as patent trolls. | |
Glenn Archer, former Federal Circuit chief judge, dies at 82 | Top |
Archer, who was nominated by President Ronald Reagan, joined the Federal Circuit bench in December 1985. He served as the court's chief judge from March 18, 1994, to Dec. 24, 1997, and then assumed senior status. | |
Judicial nominee stalls after Kansas senator's flip | Top |
President Barack Obama's choice for a spot on a federal appeals court is getting bottled up in committee, after one of the nominee's home-state senators apparently reversed his initial support. | |
COURTSIDE: Newest justices join cert pool | Top |
The U.S. Supreme Court's two newest justices have decided to remain in the Court's so-called "cert pool," leaving Justice Samuel Alito Jr. as the only justice whose law clerks screen incoming cases for just one member of the Court. | |
Roberts Court extends line of permissive First Amendment rulings in video game case | Top |
Just how conservative or pro-business the Roberts Court is continues to generate debate. But on one subject, the trend line is undeniable: a strong majority favors classic First Amendment protection for even the most objectionable speech. | |
For business, a big week at Court | Top |
Justices curtail employment class actions, as well as climate-change and generic-drug suits. | |
Top British law firms navigating D.C. waters | Top |
Two more British giants appear to be dipping their toes in the Potomac, hoping that they can leverage their global client base to build Washington-based regulatory practices. | |
A question of contempt | Top |
Prosecutors in the Ted Stevens case want the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit to strike down Judge Emmet Sullivan's contempt ruling. Their lawyers call the judge's finding flawed and said it could potentially harm their careers. | |
Mistrial result of blunder, experts agree | Top |
The sudden collapse of the Clemens prosecution was an embarrassment for the government, and observers were left wondering how the prosecution team could slip up in a case that has consumed significant resources and generated national scrutiny. | |
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