The latest from National Law Journal - Washington
- Rule sought for unsealing grand jury records
- A fight over 'Libya'
- Kagan bows out of 66 cases in new term
- Antitrust spat tests D.C. courts' jurisdiction
- INADMISSIBLE
- Conviction upheld in Congressional bribery case — with a major caveat
- D.C. Circuit grapples with contempt dispute in Ted Stevens case
- Software company may maintain two separate suits against DOJ
- Doomsday at the high court: What to do?
- COURTSIDE: Rainy days and third Mondays always get them down
- Courtside: Katyal's path to Hogan Lovells
- Not quite ready to quit
- Judges may take bigger role guiding pro se
- Making more out of less
Rule sought for unsealing grand jury records | Top |
For months, the U.S. Justice Department vigorously opposed the unsealing of former president Richard Nixon's 1975 testimony in the Watergate investigation, but they lost that dispute over the summer. Now, Attorney General Eric Holder Jr. is pitching a change in the rules to create tighter control over the release of historically significant grand jury material. | |
A fight over 'Libya' | Top |
As violence between rebels and government forces in Libya escalated in February, the conflict found its way to an unusual place — a cybersquatting case in Washington federal court. | |
Kagan bows out of 66 cases in new term | Top |
Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan's prior position as U.S. solicitor general continues to prompt her to recuse herself in individual cases as she begins her second term on the Court. | |
Antitrust spat tests D.C. courts' jurisdiction | Top |
Just because federal agencies are housed within city limits, the precedent goes, doesn't mean D.C. courts have jurisdiction to hear every case that involves contact with a federal actor. An antitrust dispute between Brazilian and U.S. producers of materials used to make steel is testing the limits of this precedent. | |
INADMISSIBLE | Top |
Equal Justice praise from AG; new IG nom pleases Republicans; tuber lobbying; briefly in the brig; Davies case changes goals; honoring McLeese; and Thompson Hine in the kitchen in this week's column. | |
Conviction upheld in Congressional bribery case — with a major caveat | Top |
A federal appeals court has upheld the conviction of a former defense contractor on charges of bribing disgraced U.S. Rep. Randall "Duke" Cunningham, but ordered a hearing on a constitutional issue that could open the door to a new trial. | |
D.C. Circuit grapples with contempt dispute in Ted Stevens case | Top |
The lawyers representing two attorneys in the botched public corruption case against late Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens (R) Monday asked an appeals court in Washington to vacate a judge's order holding the prosecutors in contempt. | |
Software company may maintain two separate suits against DOJ | Top |
A software company's Lanham Act case against the U.S. Department of Justice in federal district court doesn't bar it from maintaining a separate case against DOJ in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims for breach of license, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has ruled. | |
Doomsday at the high court: What to do? | Top |
What would happen if some or all of the nine justices of the U.S. Supreme Court were taken out in a terrorist attack? It's a question that the framers of the Constitution did not anticipate, and policymakers ever since have not thought much about. As a result, the answer is the same as for the departure of a single justice: the clunky nomination and confirmation process. | |
COURTSIDE: Rainy days and third Mondays always get them down | Top |
The Supreme Court will be slightly less visible this month as it begins its new term. With little fanfare, the Court announced Tuesday that it was canceling its public session on Oct. 17, the third Monday of its October cycle of sittings. "The Supreme Court will no longer sit for a non-argument day in its October session," the Court press release stated, without offering a reason. | |
Courtside: Katyal's path to Hogan Lovells | Top |
When Neal Katyal left the Justice Department as acting solicitor general in June, he was feted by Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. On Tuesday Hogan Lovells, the firm where Roberts himself made his name as a top appellate advocate in the 1990s, announced it had hired Katyal, in a sense, as a successor to Roberts. | |
Not quite ready to quit | Top |
Some legal public service advocates are planting seeds among senior firm lawyers that pro bono work has numerous rewards — and that they can continue on that path after they retire by starting new careers with nonprofits. | |
Judges may take bigger role guiding pro se | Top |
Noting the rise in pro se litigants, and acknowledging that traditional legal services groups can't always meet those needs, the D.C. Superior Court is considering changes to its judicial conduct guidelines that would encourage judges to take a more "affirmative role" in ensuring that unrepresented parties understand what's going on. | |
Making more out of less | Top |
Since the recession took hold in 2008, many local firms have adopted new business practices in an attempt to limit real estate-related costs. This has led to making better use of existing space and becoming more value-conscious when considering a move to new office digs. | |
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