The latest from National Law Journal
- ABA stalls on honing law schools' jobs placements reports
- Senate gets pulled into First Amendment dispute
- 1st Circuit nixes suits against lawyers and auditors of defendants in prior case
- Epic stakes in mortgage war
- Selective service
- New tool fights foreign crime
- Reward offered in car bombing of attorney
- Lobbying Prater
- Joining the health care reform fray
- Lawsuit reinstated against Nixon Peabody partner
- Slideshow: 4th Annual Legal Times Awards
- THE PRACTICE: Restyled evidence rules on expert testimony coming
- OPINION: Errors in eyewitness evidence
- OPINION: It's time to fix our sentencing laws
- Corporate liability under Alien Tort Statute: Don't elevate form over substance
- LAW SCHOOLS: A SPECIAL REPORT
- SURVEY OF LAW FIRM ECONOMICS
- E-DISCOVERY: The case for treating EDD like business as usual
| ABA stalls on honing law schools' jobs placements reports | Top |
| Law schools will not have to report to the American Bar Association the percentage of their 2010 graduates who landed jobs requiring bar passage or the percentage of graduates in part-time jobs. | |
| Senate gets pulled into First Amendment dispute | Top |
| The U.S. Senate has taken the rare step of letting one of its employees offer testimony, this time in a pair of federal lawsuits in Arizona about when and where members of the public can distribute flyers on government property. | |
| 1st Circuit nixes suits against lawyers and auditors of defendants in prior case | Top |
| Plaintiffs may not proceed with class actions against lawyers and auditors who worked for the defendants in an earlier class action, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit has ruled. | |
| Epic stakes in mortgage war | Top |
| Ultimately, the Federal Housing Finance Agency's recent lawsuits against 18 of the world's largest financial institutions on behalf of Fannie and Freddie may come down to one basic question: disclosure. Did the banks omit or misstate material information about the securities they sold to Fannie and Freddie? | |
| Selective service | Top |
| After a decade in Washington, Christopher Kang has managed to preserve relationships with key people across the aisle, and he's hoping to put that good will to use on behalf of Obama's judicial nominees. | |
| New tool fights foreign crime | Top |
| A new law that gave judges broader power to freeze foreign assets is facing a key constitutional test in a Washington federal court. | |
| Reward offered in car bombing of attorney | Top |
| Investigators have offered a $10,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of whoever was responsible for a car bombing that injured a lawyer and his two teenaged sons in Michigan. | |
| Lobbying Prater | Top |
| Mark Prater, the recently chosen staff director of the powerful deficit-reduction panel, will play a key role in developing the committee's recommendations on how to find at least $1.2 trillion in savings over the next 10 years. This will make him a prime lobbying target. | |
| Joining the health care reform fray | Top |
| Two elder statesmen of the tax law bar have joined in a brief that could help stall litigation against the Obama health care reform law until 2014 or later. | |
| Lawsuit reinstated against Nixon Peabody partner | Top |
| The Supreme Court of New Hampshire has revived claims of negligent infliction of emotional distress, fraudulent misrepresentation and vicarious liability against Nixon Peabody Boston partner Regina Rockefeller and the firm stemming from an attorney's wife's lawsuit. | |
| Slideshow: 4th Annual Legal Times Awards | Top |
| The fourth annual Legal Times Awards were held on Sept. 15, recognizing the top legal talent from around the Washington metropolitan area. This year's honorees included ten "champions," lawyers who upheld the legal industry's professional mission of public duty; ten "visionaries," including attorneys who have successfully guided their firms through a tough economy; and, for the first time, 20 of the most influential in-house counsel. | |
| THE PRACTICE: Restyled evidence rules on expert testimony coming | Top |
| Although changes are not substantive, counsel should be ready to practice under the rules, to take effect in December. | |
| OPINION: Errors in eyewitness evidence | Top |
| The high court should rule that witness certainty and other subjective factors should not be measured at times when doing so would impair the integrity of the underlying reliability inquiry. | |
| OPINION: It's time to fix our sentencing laws | Top |
| Years after the Supreme Court put the ball in Congress' court, commission can finally spur action. | |
| Corporate liability under Alien Tort Statute: Don't elevate form over substance | Top |
| No good purpose is served by construing ATS so that it ends up governing which business structures are used to conduct foreign operations. | |
| LAW SCHOOLS: A SPECIAL REPORT | Top |
| Law schools around the country are launching solo and small firm "incubators" — programs that helps recent graduates establish solo practices while also encouraging free or low-cost legal services to underserved communities. | |
| SURVEY OF LAW FIRM ECONOMICS | Top |
| Our national survey shows firms had a better 2010, and despite a hazy economy, they see promise in 2011. | |
| E-DISCOVERY: The case for treating EDD like business as usual | Top |
| Rather than wait for a lawsuit, companies should plan ahead to meet discovery obligations. | |
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