The latest from National Law Journal
- Under FCPA, former Siemens executives charged with 'stunning' bribes of Argentine officials
- State lawsuits against Toyota encounter turbulence
- Verizon must pay $11 million per month in sunset royalties
- Attacks on EPA seen as nation's top environmental problem
- Law school, a ticket to economic security? Better run the numbers
- Yoga poses can't be copyrighted, says U.S. official, cited by two defendants
- With immigration case, Court takes on another potential blockbuster
- Government agrees to place conviction in FCPA case on hold
- Apple vs. Android
- INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW: Debate over Web piracy act goes viral
- INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW: Personalized medicine: a dynamic patent landscape
- INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW: Debate continues over paid-in-full patent awards
- INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW: Domestic industries have more power to protect trade secrets globally
- THE PRACTICE: Appropriation art poses challenges for copyright law
- OPINION: A bright future for ADR
- OPINION: A call for prosecutorial accountability
- IN-HOUSE COUNSEL: In law departments, spending ticks up
- ANTITRUST: DOJ's suit against AT&T: rhetoric v. reality
- LAW SCHOOLS REVIEW
- The Minority 40 Under 40
Under FCPA, former Siemens executives charged with 'stunning' bribes of Argentine officials | Top |
The biggest-ever Foreign Corrupt Practices Act case lives on with the announcement that eight former executives and agents of Siemens AG have been charged with bribing officials in Argentina to get a $1 billion government contract. | |
State lawsuits against Toyota encounter turbulence | Top |
The bumpy ride toward the first trial against Toyota over sudden acceleration claims got bumpier when a Los Angeles judge told lead plaintiff lawyers to tear up the complaints in their proposed bellwether cases and suggested that a wrongful death case might have a higher priority. | |
Verizon must pay $11 million per month in sunset royalties | Top |
Verizon Communications Inc. is on the hook for about $11 million in royalty payments for each of the next six months following a jury's verdict that its FiOS television service infringed on patents held by ActiveVideo Networks Inc. | |
Attacks on EPA seen as nation's top environmental problem | Top |
Republican attacks on the Environmental Protection Agency constitute the most pressing development in environmental law and policy facing the United States, according to Vermont Law School's 2011-'12 Environmental Watch List. | |
Law school, a ticket to economic security? Better run the numbers | Top |
You've graduated from law school. You've landed a job as an attorney. Now you want to buy a house and cement your status in the professional class. But can you afford it? Probably not — unless you can count on earning three times your annual tuition. | |
Yoga poses can't be copyrighted, says U.S. official, cited by two defendants | Top |
A copyright official's opinion that yoga poses can't be copyrighted will likely change yoga guru Bikram Choudhury's litigation posture in three copyright cases against yoga studios and their owners. | |
With immigration case, Court takes on another potential blockbuster | Top |
Once again raising the stakes in what may be an historic term, the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday agreed to decide whether Arizona's tough anti-immigration law can be enforced or is in fatal conflict with federal immigration law. | |
Government agrees to place conviction in FCPA case on hold | Top |
Prosecutors in a disastrous Foreign Corrupt Practices Act case agreed to toss the conviction of a third individual defendant in light of a federal judge's dismissal of related charges against two co-defendants for prosecutorial misconduct. | |
Apple vs. Android | Top |
Before his death, Apple Inc. Chief ExecuÂtive Officer Steve Jobs famously vowed to go "thermonuclear" against Google Inc.'s Android operating system for smartphones. The company has been following through on Jobs' threat, and ground zero is the International Trade Commission. | |
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW: Debate over Web piracy act goes viral | Top |
Opponents predict end of a free Internet; supporters say that's a huge exaggeration. | |
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW: Personalized medicine: a dynamic patent landscape | Top |
One legal question arising from recent advances in personalized medicine concerns the right of a patent owner to demand a patent license fee or simply to stop a third party from using a patented technology, such as a gene sequence. | |
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW: Debate continues over paid-in-full patent awards | Top |
Defendants prefer them, while patent owners seek compensation for willful future infringement. | |
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW: Domestic industries have more power to protect trade secrets globally | Top |
In TianRui v. ITC, the Federal Circuit upheld an ITC decision denying importation of goods when the trade secret misappropriation occurred outside the U.S. | |
THE PRACTICE: Appropriation art poses challenges for copyright law | Top |
The 2d Circuit's forthcoming ruling in 'Cariou v. Prince' likely will be a significant landmark in the debate. | |
OPINION: A bright future for ADR | Top |
Despite some challenges, alternative dispute resolution can remain a major force in resolving complex disputes. | |
OPINION: A call for prosecutorial accountability | Top |
New research shows that prosecutors are rarely disciplined when misconduct occurs. | |
IN-HOUSE COUNSEL: In law departments, spending ticks up | Top |
Survey indicates a majority of chief legal officers increased internal and external budgets in the past year. | |
ANTITRUST: DOJ's suit against AT&T: rhetoric v. reality | Top |
From a traditional antitrust analysis, it would be hard to see how the government can lose this one in court. | |
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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