The latest from National Law Journal - Washington
- Judge finds client conflicts tripped up firm
- Stripping Doe of anonymity
- Define narco-terrorist
- Judge rules beluga whales can remain on endangered species list
- INADMISSIBLE
- In fiscal 2011, EEOC won record-breaking $365M for discrimination victims
- Edward DuMont asks Obama to withdraw his nomination to Federal Circuit
- Securities lawyers praise CFPB plans to warn enforcement targets
- Supreme Rx: The health care law's pro-and-con spin doctors
- COURTSIDE: A Court with a human face
- An angry Court gives New Orleans prosecutors a scolding
- Helping soldiers in court
- Congressional deal would give LSC $348M for 2012 budget
- Legal Services braces for cuts
Judge finds client conflicts tripped up firm | Top |
Using unusually strong language, a federal bankruptcy judge recently slammed Washington's Butzel Long Tighe Patton for failing to disclose a client conflict and stripped the firm of nearly $72,000 in fees. | |
Stripping Doe of anonymity | Top |
For six years, a legal battle to unmask an anonymous informant has pitted an Arlington, Va.-based defense contractor against a Washington-based trade group trying to shield the John Doe's identity. | |
Define narco-terrorist | Top |
The case of Khan Mohammed marks the first time an appeals court will have a chance to examine the scope of a 2006 law that targets links between drug sales and terrorist activity. | |
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. | |
INADMISSIBLE | Top |
"Indict a ham sandwich" and other legal lingo explained; a big win for Crowell & Moring's pro bono client; the Justice Department's most satisfied employees; Judge Ruiz takes on language access; John Hinckley Jr.'s day in court; Covington's pint of black; and a D.C. firm decides to stay put. | |
In fiscal 2011, EEOC won record-breaking $365M for discrimination victims | Top |
It's been a record-breaking year at the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which received more discrimination charges than ever before and won an all-time high $365 million for victims of workplace discrimination, while simultaneously managing to reduce its huge backlog of cases. | |
Edward DuMont asks Obama to withdraw his nomination to Federal Circuit | Top |
Edward DuMont, an appellate litigation partner at Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr, has sent a letter to President Barack Obama asking him to withdraw his nomination to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. | |
Securities lawyers praise CFPB plans to warn enforcement targets | Top |
The Consumer Finance Protection Bureau announced on Nov. 7 that in most cases, it plans to warn people or companies before filing an enforcement action against them, in order to give them a chance to respond. | |
Supreme Rx: The health care law's pro-and-con spin doctors | Top |
Although Walter Dellinger and Randy Barnett view the constitutionality of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) through starkly different lenses, the two men have in common their long-time teaching credentials, their appellate skills and their profound interest and concern for the framework of government established by the Constitution. | |
COURTSIDE: A Court with a human face | Top |
Clare Cushman has compiled a treasure trove of colorful information about the Supreme Court and its justices, past and present, in her new book Courtwatchers: Eyewitness Accounts in Supreme Court History. | |
An angry Court gives New Orleans prosecutors a scolding | Top |
The Supreme Court took the New Orleans prosecutor's office to the woodshed on Tuesday, scolding its lawyer for what one justice said was a long history of accusations that the office has ignored the right of defendants to receive exculpatory evidence before trial. | |
Helping soldiers in court | Top |
Congress is now following a path set in recent years by law schools, law firms and the American Bar Association, which have recognized the growing imperative to provide military men and women with free legal aid when needed. | |
Congressional deal would give LSC $348M for 2012 budget | Top |
The Legal Services Corp., the independent nonprofit corporation that provides civil legal aid to the poor, would receive $348 million for its fiscal 2012 budget under a deal House and Senate members released Nov. 15. | |
Legal Services braces for cuts | Top |
Members of Congress are in the midst of negotiations that likely will lead to another cut in funding for the Legal Services Corp. Congress has decreased their budget by more than $20 million since fiscal 2010. | |
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