The latest from National Law Journal - Washington
- A fight over 'Libya'
- Kagan bows out of 66 cases in new term
- Antitrust spat tests D.C. courts' jurisdiction
- A Supreme Court memoir
- INADMISSIBLE
- Court should have granted Bosch a permanent injunction against Pylon, Federal Circuit rules
- CFPB official calls mortgage servicers 'plagued' by consumer protection problems
- Trade secret theft outside U.S. is basis for barring imports, Federal Circuit rules
- COURTSIDE: Rainy days and third Mondays always get them down
- Courtside: Katyal's path to Hogan Lovells
- COURTSIDE: Fan critiques cert petition questions
- Judges may take bigger role guiding pro se
- Making more out of less
- A taxing proposal
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. | |
A Supreme Court memoir | Top |
Former Justice John Paul Stevens, who retired in June 2010 after nearly 35 years on the Court, has not written a formal autobiography, but instead recounts his memories of five chief justices that he knew or with whom he served. | |
INADMISSIBLE | Top |
Davis v. dictatorship over fees; Issa furious, wants truth fast; no more FREE rides; Hamann says yes again to Naaman deal; Machen on legal dramas; in(and out)carceration; and Roberts' waiving school in this week's column. | |
Court should have granted Bosch a permanent injunction against Pylon, Federal Circuit rules | Top |
A split panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has ruled that the District of Delaware abused its discretion by denying a permanent injunction in a patent infringement case. | |
CFPB official calls mortgage servicers 'plagued' by consumer protection problems | Top |
During a press conference call on Thursday, Raj Date, Special Advisor to the Secretary of the Treasury for the CFPB, said the mortgage service industry was "plagued by pervasive and profound consumer protection problems," and that the new agency would make monitoring it "one of the CFPB's top priorities." | |
Trade secret theft outside U.S. is basis for barring imports, Federal Circuit rules | Top |
In a split ruling, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has upheld an International Trade Commission order that barred a company in China from importing railway wheels into the United States because the company misappropriated trade secrets in China from a U.S. company. | |
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. | |
COURTSIDE: Fan critiques cert petition questions | Top |
At its best, a well-formulated question is the shiny object that attracts the attention of a law clerk or a justice with a concise statement of an intriguing dilemma that the justices will want to solve. At its worst — and many are awful — the question presented can be a turgid, off-putting pack of run-on sentences that look like the result of a committee's hasty, last-minute compromise. | |
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. | |
A taxing proposal | Top |
President Barack Obama last week delivered a reminder to financial industry lobbyists: The battle over a special tax rate affecting private-equity and hedge-fund managers isn't finished. | |
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