The latest from National Law Journal
- Judge tentatively dismisses foreign plaintiffs' economic claims against Toyota
- Stephens Media, Righthaven affiliate, concedes that brief Web excerpt is fair use
- Judges gives lawyers in Armenian genocide case two weeks to resolve feud over claims processing
- Judge rules beluga whales can remain on endangered species list
- For health care law, an uncertain prognosis
- A law school climate clash
- Fighting to keep his law license
- 7th Circuit denies FedEx's petition against judicial panel in cases over driver classification
- Maryland governor demands that law school drop lawsuit
- WHITE-COLLAR CRIME: Export controls enforcement intensifies
- WHITE-COLLAR CRIME: Taking a stand on taking the stand
- WHITE-COLLAR CRIME: Aggressive FCPA enforcement persists
- WHITE-COLLAR CRIME: Does defense from federal RICO apply to 'little RICO' statutes?
- THE PRACTICE: A game of inches: some oral advocacy pointers
- OPINION: Occupy Wall Street's message for lawyers
- OPINION: Crisis management and Penn State
- THE CAREERIST: More bad news for women
- LAW SCHOOLS REVIEW
- The Minority 40 Under 40
Judge tentatively dismisses foreign plaintiffs' economic claims against Toyota | Top |
A federal judge has tentatively dismissed claims by consumers in foreign countries who assert economic damages against Toyota Motor Corp. based on defects associated with sudden acceleration. | |
Stephens Media, Righthaven affiliate, concedes that brief Web excerpt is fair use | Top |
The latest chapter in the Nevada federal court saga launched by aggressive copyright plaintiff Righthaven LLC is a concession by its affiliate, Las Vegas Review-Journal publisher Stephens Media, that a brief news article excerpt in an online forum is not copyright infringement. | |
Judges gives lawyers in Armenian genocide case two weeks to resolve feud over claims processing | Top |
A federal judge has ordered Mark Geragos and an attorney for his former co-counsel in a $17.5 million class action settlement to resolve in two weeks an escalating dispute over a botched claims process affecting millions of descendants of Armenian genocide victims. | |
Judge rules beluga whales can remain on endangered species list | Top |
A Washington federal judge ruled that the National Marine Fisheries Service had reason to list beluga whales as endangered in 2008, despite objections from Alaska state officials that a listing was unnecessary and would hurt the state economy. | |
For health care law, an uncertain prognosis | Top |
The U.S. Supreme Court, in answering questions surrounding the nation's new health care law, will reveal as much about its newest members as it does about the constitutionality of the law itself — and the most controversial aspect of the health care law may not ultimately produce the most important ruling. | |
A law school climate clash | Top |
Michael Mann, a professor of meteorology and geosciences at Pennsylvania State University, isn't an expert on state public-records laws. But he's fast becoming one. His research on climate change has put him at the center of two legal battles in Virginia state courts. | |
Fighting to keep his law license | Top |
In balking at putting Pierce O'Donnell behind bars for campaign finance violations, a federal judge has placed at risk something the well-known trial attorney that by all indications values more highly than his freedom: his license to practice law. | |
7th Circuit denies FedEx's petition against judicial panel in cases over driver classification | Top |
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit has denied a mandamus petition brought by FedEx against the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation. At issue was the panel's remand to their original courts of a dozen cases brought by FedEx drivers seeking to be classified as employees. | |
Maryland governor demands that law school drop lawsuit | Top |
The battle between Maryland lawmakers and the environmental clinic at the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law reignited this week, when Gov. Martin O'Malley sent a harshly worded letter to Dean Phoebe Haddon calling the clinic's involvement in a lawsuit an "ongoing injustice." | |
WHITE-COLLAR CRIME: Export controls enforcement intensifies | Top |
Anything but strict compliance with regulations may expose a company to severe civil and criminal sanctions. | |
WHITE-COLLAR CRIME: Taking a stand on taking the stand | Top |
The decision about whether a defendant testifies should be exceptionally nuanced; ramifications are hard to judge. | |
WHITE-COLLAR CRIME: Aggressive FCPA enforcement persists | Top |
Increased activity, along with recent legal developments, mandate that companies remain vigilant. | |
WHITE-COLLAR CRIME: Does defense from federal RICO apply to 'little RICO' statutes? | Top |
Because state versions are worded differently, courts divide on whether operation-or-management test applies to them. | |
THE PRACTICE: A game of inches: some oral advocacy pointers | Top |
There is no inconsistency between being aggressive and determined and being courteous and professional. | |
OPINION: Occupy Wall Street's message for lawyers | Top |
Behind every credit default swap or short of subprime mortgage-backed assets sit legal counsel sanctioning these practices; their hands are no cleaner than those of their clients. | |
OPINION: Crisis management and Penn State | Top |
Because university officials failed to appreciate that everybody is replaceable, the school's reputation has been sullied. | |
THE CAREERIST: More bad news for women | Top |
You'll need a shot or two of whiskey to get through these highlights (or are they lowlights?) of the latest survey from the National Association of Women Lawyers. | |
LAW SCHOOLS REVIEW | Top |
Rising tuition. Misleading employment statistics. Inadequate skills training. One law school professor has launched a full-scale assault on the legal education system in response to these mounting issues. Are law schools in crisis? | |
The Minority 40 Under 40 | Top |
The lawyers profiled here were all born in the 1970s, a decade when law schools and law firms were just beginning to welcome minorities in significant numbers. The thriving careers of these lawyers — at law firms and in government, academia and public interest — attest to the greater opportunities available to them, as well as to their talents. | |
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