| | Court Forms | | Law Journals | | Law Students | | Law Dictionary | | News |
|
iLegalNews.Com |
BankruptcyCode.US | |||||
|
|
United States Law.US | |||||
|
Legal Front Page News© |
US Government | |||||
|
July 27, 2006 |
US Tax Center |
| US Codes | | State Codes | | Federal Civil Procedure | | Lawyers |
| Social Security | | Finance | Hotels |

World News
Financial
News
Yesterday's FrontPage
News
US Supreme Court Opinions
Online Legal News Sites
Bloggers Directory
| TODAY'S Legal News STORIES - July 27, 2006 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
![]() |
|
Another Doping Scandal Rocks Tour Floyd Landis' stunning Tour de France victory just four days ago was thrown into question when his team said he tested positive for high levels of testosterone during the race. Landis has been suspended pending more test results. More... CBSNews.com Weekday Evening-July 27, 2006 Israel Calls Up More Troops Killer Mom's Ex Bashes Prosecution Bush Signs Voting Rights Act Extension Escalating Baghdad Violence Kills 31 |
|
|
Section Front |
|
|
|
![]() |
|
Israel Calls Up More Troops But the security cabinet decided not to expand the ground operation in Lebanon. Instead, the air strikes have been stepped up. Meanwhile, al Qaeda's No. 2 weighed in, warning that the fighting could expand and that they will "attack everywhere." More... CBSNews.com Weekday Evening-July 27, 2006 |
France's New Steps To Deal With Heat
Escalating Baghdad Violence Kills 31
Japan's
Pregnant Princess Doing Well
Somalia's Weak Government Unravels
|
Suit Proceeds Against High-Profile Nanny New York Law Journal A civil suit alleging that a nanny mailed malicious letters containing confidential medical and financial records to her former employer's friends, family and business associates is going forward following a Manhattan judge's denial in part of the nanny's motion to dismiss. The suit marks the second high-profile dispute between nanny Nancy Poznek and a former employer. In 1994, former "Today Show" host Katie Couric fired Poznek, who subsequently revealed personal information about Couric to the media. |
||
|
Greenberg Traurig Launching Tampa Office Daily Business Review Miami-based Greenberg Traurig is opening its first office in Tampa, Fla., invading the home turf of rival law firm giant Holland & Knight. The office will be Greenberg's eighth in Florida and its 27th nationwide. Its attorneys will focus on key Greenberg Traurig practice areas such as real estate, transactions, business litigation and land-use work. David B. Weinstein, a litigator with a focus on civil and criminal defense work, has left Bales Weinstein to be managing partner of the new Greenberg office. |
||
|
Realtors Face Probes Over Web Site Listings The National Law Journal Federal regulators are cracking down on the real estate industry for alleged anti-competitive practices online that hurt home buyers and sellers. At issue are claims that consumers are being denied access to all the home listings on public Web sites, and that firms offering cheaper services on the Internet are facing restrictions. Most recently, the FTC filed an antitrust complaint against the Austin Board of Realtors in Texas. Visit the Tech Law Practice Center SUBSCRIPTION REQUIRED |
||
|
Social
Security Aids Domestic Violence Victims MSNBC - USA ... It seems that the Social Security Administration (SSA) will let you change your Social Security number under certain circumstances. Why would you want to? ... See all stories on this topic Google Social Security |
| Providence
woman admits selling counterfeit Social Security cards Eyewitness News - East Providence,RI,USA PROVIDENCE, RI (AP) -- A Providence woman pleads guilty to selling fake Social Security and immigration cards. The US Attorney's ... See all stories on this topic Google Social Security |
|
UPDATE 2 - US House to vote on estate taxes - Hastert Reuters - USA WASHINGTON, July 26 (Reuters) - The US House of Representatives will vote on legislation providing for a long-term rollback of estate taxes this week, House ... See all stories on this topic Google Social Tax |
|
'Harry Potter' translator busted for dodging taxes Mainichi Daily News - Japan Matsuoka, 62, registered her address in Switzerland in 2001, and reportedly pays taxes there. But National Tax Agency officials ... See all stories on this topic Google Social Tax |
|
|
|
|
|
|
![]() |
|
Israel, Hezbollah Battle For Key Town As many as a dozen Israeli soldiers are reportedly killed by Hezbollah in the battle for a key southern Lebanon town. Four U.N. observers were also killed by an Israeli air strike, as diplomats attended an emergency meeting in Rome. CBS News Summary More... |
Saddam:
Kill Me By Firing Squad
Blackouts Persist In Ca., Mo., & NYC
Orlando
Cracks Down On Free Meals
Senate
OKs Abortion Notification Bill
| Politics
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
![]() |
|
Blackouts Persist In Ca., Mo., & NYC At least 56 are dead in California's heat wave, with some towns facing a fourth day without power. In St. Louis, a utility worker was killed trying to restore power; 145,000 homes and businesses don't have it. In NYC, things are getting better. CBS News Summary More... |
50
Missing Women Linked To Jailed Man
Orlando
Cracks Down On Free Meals
Remembering The Andrea Doria
Political Bigwigs Get Jury Duty Call
| Civil Rights
Personal Injury Top Legal Headlines - July 25, 2006-Findlaw |
|
|
|
|
|
|
![]() |
|
Cruise Is Master Of His Domain The World Intellectual Property Organization has ruled that Tom Cruise is master of his domain ... domain name that is. A Canada-based company must hand over TomCruise.com to the actor. CBS News Summary More.. |
Congress OKs Child Molesters Database
Web
Gambling Firm Axes Arrested CEO
Three
Convicted Of Killing For Xbox
Lightning Deaths A Reminder Of Danger
|
HP's Mercury Buy Designed To Boost Software Growth Easy Bourse (Communiquιs de presse) - Paris,France ... In its first major acquisition under Chief Executive Mark Hurd, Hewlett-Packard Co. ... "Mercury adds strategic value to HP," wrote Bear Stearns analyst Andrew ... |
|
|
Section Front |
|
|
|
![]() |
|
Senate OKs Abortion Notification Bill A bill that would make it a crime to take a pregnant girl across state lines for an abortion without her parents' knowledge passed the Senate, but vast differences with the House version stood between the measure and President Bush's desk. More... |
Poll:
War Heavy On Minds Of Americans
Specter
Readying Bill To Sue Bush
Political Bigwigs Get Jury Duty Call
Signing
Statements: Virtues And Vices
|
US Stocks Decline on Amazon.Com, Boeing, Corning Forecasts |
| Legal News STORIES - July 25, 2006 | ||
|
Wyeth Faces First Trial Over Hormone Replacement Therapy The Associated Press Linda Reeves blames her breast cancer on roughly eight years of taking Prempro, an estrogen-progestin combination made by Wyeth and prescribed to relieve menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes. Next month, Reeves will face Wyeth in a federal court in Little Rock, Ark., in the first of approximately 4,500 lawsuits filed against the company over hormone replacement therapy. Key to her case are internal marketing documents her lawyers claim show Wyeth put profits ahead of patients. |
||
| TODAY'S Legal News STORIES - July 25, 2006 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
![]() |
|
No
Signs Of End To Mideast Fighting Israel resumed its bombing of Beirut as Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice left the Mideast after meeting with Israeli and Palestinian leaders. Israel says it has sealed off a Hezbollah stronghold, but rockets continue to fall on Haifa. More... CBSNews.com Weekday Afternoon |
D.C.
Police On Alert For 'Wig Lady'
Heat
Tests California's Energy Supply
Specter
Readying Bill To Sue Bush
23
Sailors Rescued Near Alaska
Bear Stearns & Co
|
Martha Stewart names Hochhauser CFO Reuters - USA Hochhauser been Acting CFO since March. He joined the company in May of 2000 and previously worked in the equity research department at Bear, Stearns & Co. ... See all stories on this topic |
|
Yahoo asks if you will pay more for easy use of songs Houston Chronicle - United States ... So why would Yahoo experiment with selling just one song ? and one from an artist as lame as Jessica Simpson ? for more than double that price? ... See all stories on this topic |
|
Yahoo Yahoo, Symantec debut Net security service CNET News.com - San Francisco,CA,USA Yahoo and Symantec unveiled a joint consumer Internet security service Monday that will help the two companies compete against major rivals such as Google and ... See all stories on this topic |
|
|
![]() |
|
D.C. Police On Alert For 'Wig Lady' Police in the Washington region are warning bank tellers the "Wig Lady." They say a middle-aged woman has been walking into banks wearing wigs to impersonate account holders. She has stolen over $200,000 from the checking accounts of 20 women. More... CBSNews.com Weekday Afternoon |
Heat
Tests California's Energy Supply
23
Sailors Rescued Near Alaska
Report:
Terror List Causes Gridlock
Gay
Rights Groups Start Ad Campaign
|
ABA: President's Bill-Signing Statements Violate the Constitution The Associated Press President Bush's penchant for writing exceptions to laws he has just signed violates the Constitution, an American Bar Association task force says in a report highly critical of the practice. The attachments, known as bill-signing statements, say Bush reserves a right to revise, interpret or disregard measures on national security and constitutional grounds. ABA policymakers will decide whether to denounce the statements and encourage a legal fight over them. |
||
|
Ethics Crusaders Crush 'SuperLawyers' New Jersey Law Journal A New Jersey Supreme Court ethics panel knocked "SuperLawyers" and "Best Lawyers in America" out of the business of ranking New Jersey lawyers last week by prohibiting attorneys from advertising their inclusion and taking part in the selection process. Word of the Committee on Attorney Advertising's opinion spread quickly among legal marketers around the country and touched off a frenzied review of ad campaigns, Web sites and letterheads at New Jersey firms whose attorneys are on the lists. |
||
|
Are Litigators Ready for the New Meet-and-Confer Sessions? The National Law Journal Lawyers accustomed to "drive-by" meet-and-confer sessions with clients and opposing counsel should get ready to park and prepare for an extended conversation. The amended Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are going to profoundly affect meet-and-confer discussions concerning e-discovery. Litigators must acquaint themselves with the world of IT if they hope to keep up. Carolyn Southerland, special counsel to Baker Botts in Houston, shares some rules of survival. Visit Legal Technology |
||
|
D.C. Federal Judge Takes Center Stage in Two Huge Telecom Mergers Legal Times Right now, the eyes of the antitrust world are locked on D.C. federal Judge Emmet Sullivan as he considers whether to approve SBC Communications' $16 billion acquisition of AT&T Corp. and Verizon Communications Inc.'s $8.4 billion purchase of MCI. His role in reviewing these mergers is being intensely scrutinized, not only because these are the two largest telephone mergers in U.S. history but also because they are likely to redefine the power courts have to challenge such deals. Visit In-House Counsel |
||
| TODAY'S Legal News STORIES - July 24, 2006 |
| TODAY'S
HIGHLIGHTS Pakistan Expanding Nuclear Program Pakistan has begun building what independent analysts say is a powerful new reactor for producing plutonium, a move that, if verified, would signal a major expansion of the country's nuclear weapons capabilities and a potential new escalation in the region's arms race. (By Joby Warrick, The Washington Post) |
|
POLITICS
Bush's Tactic of Refusing Laws Is Probed A panel of legal scholars and lawyers assembled by the American Bar Association is sharply criticizing the use of "signing statements" by President Bush that assert his right to ignore or not enforce laws passed by Congress. (By Michael Abramowitz, The Washington Post) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
![]() |
|
Rice Makes Surprise Visit To Beirut Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice made a surprise visit to Lebanon to launch diplomatic efforts aimed at ending 13 days of warfare. Meanwhile, Israeli ground forces pushed deeper into the country in heavy fighting with Hezbollah guerrillas. More... CBSNews.com Weekday Morning News Summary |
Rice
Makes Surprise Visit To Beirut
Ariel
Sharon's Condition Worsens
Landis
Is Tour De France Champ
Tiger
Woods Back On Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
![]() |
|
Saddam Hussein Hospitalized Saddam Hussein is being fed with a tube, says a prosecutor, to ensure he'll be well enough to appear in court. Saddam and three co-defendants have been on a hunger strike since July 7th - demanding security for defense lawyers and their families. More... CBSNews.com Weekday Morning News Summary |
Western
Heat Wave Kills At Least Six
U.S.
Gas Prices Hit All-Time High
Highway
Sniper Kills 1 In Indiana
Cancer
Drug May Pose Heart Danger
|
Commentary: Viewing Law Blogs as a Vast Amicus Brief Special to Law.com The proliferation of blogs written by law professors and attorneys often results in robust online discussions of cases pending before the courts for resolution. In this way, appellate attorney Howard J. Bashman writes, the Internet can be regarded as a vast amicus brief through which legal experts may influence cases' outcome. But what is the proper response of judges if they, too, are reading the legal blogosphere's debates about the proper way to decide those cases? Visit the Litigation Practice Center SUBSCRIPTION REQUIRED |
||
|
Has the Patent Litigation Boom Gone Bust? IP Law & Business Is the patent litigation boom over? IP Law & Business' annual patent litigation survey shows an overall decline in the number of cases filed in 2005 -- the first drop in five years. Although at first glance the numbers reflect a downturn, it may represent a shift in patent litigation rather than a decrease. Fewer cases are filed today but, according to David Barkan, head of Fish & Richardson's litigation group, "Cases are getting larger, and the size of cases is not reflected in the statistics." Visit the IP Law Practice Center SUBSCRIPTION REQUIRED |
||
|
Plaintiffs Attorneys Jockey for Backdating Cases New York Law Journal With challenges to backdating of executive stock options proliferating, plaintiffs attorneys are jockeying for control of potentially lucrative litigation. More than 60 companies are being investigated by federal agencies. But plaintiffs lawyers aren't waiting for indictments. They've been racing to file billions of dollars in lawsuits, with more on the way. "It's the biggest thing going on in my field," says one attorney whose firm has filed at least 34 backdating-related suits. Visit In-House Counsel |
||
| Legal News STORIES - July 21, 2006 |
![]() |
|
Israel
Poised For Major Ground Assault Israel says it won't stop until Hezbollah is dislodged, and has warned people in South Lebanon to flee as it prepared for a likely ground invasion to set up a deep buffer zone. Attacks continue, with reports that Hezbollah rockets landed in Haifa. More... |
|
Bush Back Rub Gets Big Play Beryl Comes Ashore At Nantucket High-Profile Gay Couple Has Separated Two Governors Fund Stem Cell Research |
|
Charges Filed in Options Probe Federal prosecutors yesterday filed the first criminal charges against a top executive who allegedly manipulated stock option awards in order to give his employees a bigger payday and conceal corporate expenses. (By Carrie Johnson, The Washington Post) |
| Ga.
gun store sues New York In the $400 million lawsuit, Cobb business claims New York state officials slandered it with "rogue gun dealers" reference. AJC NewslettersDate 2006/07/21 Fri AM 06:32:38 CDT |
| Police
back McKinney challenger Several local and national police groups are still fuming over the Georgia congresswoman's run-in with a Capitol police officer, and at least one has written a check for her Democratic opponent. AJC NewslettersDate 2006/07/21 Fri AM 06:32:38 CDT |
|
DOJ's Former Tobacco Litigation Chief Says McCallum Misled Congress The Associated Press A Justice Department official who slashed the amount of money being sought from tobacco companies made misleading statements to Congress, says an ex-government lawyer who handled a landmark lawsuit against the industry. The comments by attorney Sharon Eubanks follow Associate Attorney General Robert McCallum's decision a year ago to downsize a proposed smoking cessation program from $130 billion to $10 billion. That's the amount the government wants a judge to order cigarette companies to pay. |
||
|
Negligence Suit Results in $1.1 Million Judgment Against Akin Gump Texas Lawyer A state district judge in Dallas recently signed a judgment ordering Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld to pay a former client about $1.1 million in damages in a negligence suit. No individual lawyers were named as defendants. The case stems from Akin Gump's representation of the plaintiffs in an underlying declaratory judgment suit filed in 1997. Christopher Scanlan, who represented Akin Gump at trial, said the firm is likely to appeal the judgment. |
||
|
Ex-CEO Charged in Backdating Probe, as SEC Weighs Others' Conduct The Recorder On Thursday, the Securities and Exchange Commission announced criminal and civil complaints against the former CEO of Brocade Communications Systems -- the first charges in the stock option backdating probe that's hit about 80 companies, many in Silicon Valley. But even as the SEC chairman excoriated Gregory Reyes, lawyers and accountants for the government, companies and executives are attempting to figure out how to separate the truly criminal conduct from less nefarious errors in dating options grants. |
||
| Legal News STORIES - July 20, 2006 |
|
CNN Legal Watch
Kennedy cousin appeals to top court
Attorneys for Kennedy cousin Michael Skakel asked the
U.S. Supreme
Court to overturn his murder conviction, saying
his due process
rights were violated because a statute of
limitations had expired.
FULL STORY

Campus leader admits robbing bank
Greg Hogan, a former Lehigh University class president,
pleaded
guilty to robbing a bank, saying he did it to pay online poker
debts.
The preacher's son faces up to three years in prison at next
month's sentencing.
FULL STORY CNN Legal Watch
|
House Chairman Seeks Investigation, Possible Impeachment of Calif. Judge The Associated Press House Judiciary Committee Chairman James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., has introduced a resolution to allow his committee to investigate U.S. District Judge Manuel Real, who has served on the federal bench in Los Angeles since 1966. The committee would then consider whether impeachment proceedings are warranted, Sensenbrenner said. Real allegedly seized control of a bankruptcy case involving a defendant he knew and then allowed the defendant to live rent-free for years in a house she'd been ordered to vacate. |
|
Special Masters Can Do the Heavy Lifting for E-Discovery The National Law Journal The multitude of tasks and issues emerging around electronic discovery carry more weight and effort than many courts can bear, say our commentators. Fortunately, a special master can address the rules, processes and disputes that complicate e-discovery. He or she can address pretrial concerns, such as costs, confidentiality and data spoliation, allowing courts to focus their energies on more appropriate tasks -- like dispensing justice. Visit Legal Technology |
|||
|
|
|||
|
Meet the Original Patent Troll IP Law & Business Instead of looking for clients, litigator Raymond Niro looks for patents, holding the dubious distinction of being the first patent troll. In 2001 Intel assistant GC Peter Detkin coined the term to characterize Niro and his client. "Troll was a derivative of, er, me," says Niro. But love him or hate him for his innovative ways, there's no doubt that Niro and his firm are at the center of a patent ecosystem, connecting patent-holding companies, lawyers and inventors, and making serious profits. Visit the IP Law Practice Center SUBSCRIPTION REQUIRED |
| Legal News STORIES - July 19, 2006 |
|
Congress Debates Auctions for Lead Counsel in Securities Class Actions The National Law Journal Chief Judge Vaughn Walker of the Northern District of California testified recently before a House subcommittee, endorsing legislation that would allow judges to use competitive bidding to select lead counsel in securities class actions. Walker was one of the first federal judges to experiment with competitive selection of class counsel, and the 3rd and 9th Circuits have since curbed the practice. But the new legislation is driven, in part, by the recent indictments against Milberg Weiss. Visit In-House Counsel |
||
|
Google 'Click Fraud' Settlement Criticized The National Law Journal More than 40 online advertisers alleging that the nation's top search engines conspired to overcharge them have filed objections aimed at unraveling a $90 million settlement with Google. The class action alleges that Google and others charged two advertisers for fraudulent clicks in pay-per-click advertising programs. Objectors say the proposed settlement is unfair, in part because they will receive only 10 percent of a $60 million fund. They're also not happy about the size of the attorney fees. Visit the Tech Law Practice Center SUBSCRIPTION REQUIRED |
||
|
Milberg Weiss, Partners Plead Not Guilty to Federal Charges The Associated Press Top class action law firm Milberg Weiss Bershad & Schulman and two of its partners have pleaded not guilty to charges of secretly paying more than $11 million in kickbacks to get people to take part in shareholder lawsuits. The case has already resulted in plea deals with two people allegedly involved in the payoff schemes. On Monday, prosecutor Douglas Axel said there is a "significant possibility" of a future superseding indictment being filed, which may add additional claims and parties. |
||
|
TODAY'S
HIGHLIGHTS-Washington Post
July 18, 2006 Evacuations Underway in Beirut BEIRUT, July 18 -- By helicopter and ship, hundreds of Americans and Europeans fled on Tuesday from Beirut, ending its first week of siege, as casualties mounted in deadly Israeli raids that struck a Lebanese military base, a truck carrying food from Syria and a village near the border. The... (By Anthony Shadid, The Washington Post) Conservative Anger Grows Over Bush's Foreign Policy (The Washington Post) Officials Declare Code Red for Region Severe Storms May Hit Later Today (The Washington Post) More Today's Highlights |
|
Legal News STORIES - July 17, 2006 |
|
Date 2006/07/16 Sun PM 09:49:15 CDT Japan to Crack Down on N. Korea Financial Transfers, Aso Says Bloomberg - USA July 16 (Bloomberg) -- Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Aso said the nation will take steps to control North Korea's ``transfer of financial resources'' to help ... See all stories on this topic |
|
Legal News STORIES - July 17, 2006Enteretainment Britney Spears longs to return to performing, sells NY apartment South Asian Women's Forum - New Delhi,India Britney Spears, who has reportedly sold her apartment in NY for $4m, is longing to get back to performing and is open to musical collaboration with her husband ... |
|
Indonesia quake triggers 6-foot tsunami Earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 7.2 sends big wave crashing into a beach resort on Indonesia's Java island, damaging hotels and sending boats smashing into houses, according to witnesses. |
|
Where Does the Supreme Court Stand Today? Legal Talk Network and Law.com Keep up with the ever-changing U.S. Supreme Court, as attorneys and Law.com bloggers Bob Ambrogi and J. Craig Williams are joined by Akin Gump partner Rex Heinke and Supreme Court correspondent Tony Mauro for this wide-ranging discussion of the high court and its season of change. Windows Media Player Download the MP3 |
||
|
Measuring Federal Appellate Courts' Success Before the U.S. Supreme Court Special to Law.com Every July, after the U.S. Supreme Court adjourns for summer recess, statistics become available showing how the federal appellate courts fared when their decisions went before the high court for review during the just-concluded term. Attorney Howard J. Bashman, who has been analyzing the 3rd Circuit's record before the high court since 2001, examines the latest figures for the appellate courts --- and also explains why the statistics can be misleading. Visit the Litigation Practice Center SUBSCRIPTION REQUIRED |
||
| Legal News STORIES - July 14, 2006 |
|
From Online Poker to Prison: The Laws Governing Online Gambling Special to Law.com Online gambling is a lucrative industry, but it's also illegal when the activity occurs in a state that outlaws gambling. Meanwhile, the government's tools for fighting the practice are getting the job done, but often in a roundabout way. Attorneys Marc S. Friedman and Athena Cheng examine the old standbys such as the Wire Act and the Travel Act, and look ahead to the more comprehensive Internet Gambling Prohibition Act, currently wending its way through the legislative process. Visit the Tech Law Practice Center SUBSCRIPTION REQUIRED |
||
|
Building a First in IP Fact-Finding The Recorder When Joshua Walker helped mount a case against perpetrators of genocide in Rwanda, he built a database of trial evidence under wartime conditions. Now, he's working with Stanford Law School to build a groundbreaking database of all IP litigation in the United States. "We want to track everything that's happening ... who's patenting what, how many lawsuits are being filed, where they are being filed, how judges are deciding the cases, and why are judges making the decisions they're making," said Walker. Visit the IP Law Practice Center SUBSCRIPTION REQUIRED |
||
|
Calif. AG Joins Antitrust Suit Against Chip-Makers The Recorder California Attorney General Bill Lockyer said he will file an antitrust lawsuit in federal court today that charges seven computer chip-makers with conspiring to inflate prices for their dynamic random access memory chips, or DRAM. Lockyer is expected to join 33 other attorneys general in a complaint filed in the Northern District of California. The state prosecutors' suit is the latest in a wave of legal attacks against the companies. A federal investigation in 2002 led to $730 million in collective fines. |
||
|
July 14, 2006 FINDLAW CITIZENS FOR EQUAL PROTECTION, ET AL. V. JON C. BRUNING,
ATTORNEY GENERAL; DAVE HEINEMAN, GOVERNOR, IN THEIR OFFICIAL CAPACITIES |
|
Under Fire, DA Defends Decision to Oust Female Part-Timers New York Law Journal Nassau County, N.Y., DA Kathleen Rice on Tuesday defended her decision to let go a dozen part-time women prosecutors unless they agree to work full time. The part-timers are all mothers, though the DA's office says that some have older children. Rice's decision "shows that family is not an important item on her agenda," says the state Women's Bar Association president. But Rice called the statement a "knee-jerk reaction" that fails to recognize the steps she has taken to place women in senior positions. |
||
|
4th Circuit Nominee Boyle: 'Missed' Appearance of Conflict in Four Cases The Associated Press Terrence Boyle, President Bush's nominee for the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, acknowledges missing the appearance of a conflict of interest in four cases in which he is accused of ruling on litigants in whose companies his family held stock. "These situations were an oversight, an inadvertent mistake," Boyle wrote in a letter. It wasn't clear that the letter improved his prospects for confirmation. Democratic leader Harry Reid says his party will filibuster Boyle's nomination if it comes to the floor. |
||
|
EEOC Moves to Compel Testimony on Changing Sidley Partners' Status New York Law Journal The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which is suing Sidley Austin for age discrimination on behalf of 31 partners demoted or expelled in 1999, has moved to compel the firm to produce a deposition witness to testify about the firm's reasons for changing the partners' status. The information sought by the EEOC would be considered highly sensitive at any firm; several demoted partners last year asked the EEOC to drop them from the case if it meant risking public disclosure of their personnel records. |
||
|
N.Y. Lawyer Indicted for Stealing $1.6 Million From Clients New York Law Journal Manhattan lawyer Campbell Holder was indicted Wednesday for stealing $1.6 million from seven of his clients. Holder, who was born in Barbados, allegedly used the money taken from his clients' accounts to pay for numerous trips to the Caribbean island, a Lexus and a BMW, and items from Louis Vuitton and other stores, according to the Manhattan district attorney's office. If proven, the accusations against Holder would place him among New York attorneys who have stolen the largest amounts from clients. |
||
Politics July 13, 2006
Entertainment
July 13, 2006TODAY'S Legal News STORIES - July 12, 2006
From AJC Newsletters ajc.com
Rescuers search train for bodies
Blasts rip
India trains
Eight bombs explode in first-class compartments of packed Bombay commuter
trains, killing 147 people and wounding hundreds.
Photos |
Fear in Atlanta
Rumsfeld visits air
base in Iraq |
Hezbollah abducts 2 Israeli soldiers
![]() |
| Rescuers search train for bodies |
Ex-Coke worker to
fight charge
New details about the alleged plot to steal secrets from Coke
and sell them to Pepsi emerge, including how the three suspects
may have known each other and that two product
samples not one were taken.
![]()
Washington Post
Which president was elected with the highest popular and electoral votes?
A.
George Washington
B.
Ronald Reagan
C.
Bill Clinton
D.
Richard Nixon
|
Stock Conflict Cited in 9th Circuit Judge's Trademark Rulings The Recorder After losing two trademark cases, an attorney for a software company is trying to get the rulings thrown out because one of the 9th Circuit judges hearing the case apparently had a financial conflict. Judge Harry Pregerson wrote opinions favoring Time Warner in two cases in which M2 Software fought the multimedia giant over the trademark to the name "M2." Mark Pettinari, representing M2 of Los Angeles, says Pregerson owned stock in Time Warner at the time he heard the cases and issued the rulings. |
||
|
Are Companies Bound by Promises of Lifetime Benefits? The National Law Journal Over the past decade, the number of retirees offered health benefits by the nation's largest companies has plummeted, and some union retirees promised lifetime medical benefits have learned that "lifetime" only means "until revoked." Across the country, federal courts have been pulled into the wrangling over how promises of lifetime benefits can be broken, or whether the promises existed at all. The courts have provided divergent answers, signaling that the U.S. Supreme Court may have to step into the fray. Visit the Employment Law Practice Center SUBSCRIPTION REQUIRED |
||
|
Death Penalty Disquiet on High Court Echoes Earlier Time Legal Times In the wake of a recent batch of Supreme Court decisions on the death penalty, abolitionists are beginning to draw parallels with a period more than 30 years ago, when the Court's long-standing support for capital punishment dissolved, at least for a while. This term, four justices made it clear that their concerns, especially about the possible execution of the innocent, are deepening. Their mood guarantees turmoil ahead on the issue, with Justice Anthony Kennedy in his characteristic role as swing vote. Visit the U.S. Supreme Court Monitor |
||
TODAY'S Legal News STORIES - July 11, 2006
|
With Class Dismissed, Smoker's Widow Files Own Suit in Florida Daily Business Review The widow of a smoker filed the first individual suit Monday in Broward Circuit Court since the Florida Supreme Court eased the way for smoker lawsuits against tobacco companies. Lucrecia Pummer sued Philip Morris and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco for negligence and strict liability, claiming their actions led to her husband's death from lung cancer. The plaintiff also alleges the defendants, in addition to other tobacco makers, engaged in civil conspiracy by concealing the inherent dangers of smoking. |
||
|
IBM Seeks Dismissal of Claims It Hacked Into Law Firm's E-Mail Legal Times A federal judge is deciding whether to throw out a suit filed by D.C.-based law and lobbying boutique Butera & Andrews alleging that IBM and an employee in its Durham, N.C., facility tried to hack into the firm's e-mail system. Private investigators identified more than 42,000 entry attempts, which, according to the complaint, could be traced to e-mail addresses from IBM's Durham office. The firm is suing IBM for attorney fees and over $60,000 that it paid for outside counsel and to beef up its security. |
||
|
3rd Circuit: Jury-Selection Flaw Brings New Penalty Phase in Capital Case The Legal Intelligencer A potential juror in a death penalty case cannot be stricken solely because she expressed opposition to capital punishment, but instead must be asked "follow-up questions" about her "willingness and ability to follow the law," the 3rd Circuit has ruled. Overturning Andre Stevens' death sentence, the court found that striking juror Nancy Hartling violated a 1968 U.S. Supreme Court decision, which held that a juror may not be excused for cause simply for "voicing general objections to the death penalty." |
||
|
Groundbreaking Trial Could Help Decide Katrina Insurance Claims The Associated Press A Mississippi federal judge on Monday began hearing a groundbreaking trial that could signal whether thousands of people whose homes were destroyed by Hurricane Katrina can receive payouts for losses their insurance companies claim were caused by flooding. The trial is the first among hundreds of lawsuits challenging insurers over the wind-versus-water issue. Plaintiffs attorneys hope a ruling in homeowners' favor would pressure companies to pay millions of dollars for homeowners whose claims were rejected. |
||
|
N.Y. High Court Says Mistaken Avowal of Fatherhood Imposes an 'Equitable
Paternity' New York Law Journal He who acts like a father, is a father -- at least legally -- the New York Court of Appeals said in imposing "equitable paternity" on a man who wrongly assumed he had fathered a girl and acted accordingly. The man had argued that the order to pay child support on behalf of a child he did not father effectively saddled him with an involuntary adoption, in violation of the Constitution and contrary to public policy. But the court focused not on whether he got a raw deal but on the best interests of the child. |
||
|
TODAY'S STORIES - July 10, 2006 |
||
|
Am Law 200 Firms Still Have Way to Go on Pro Bono The American Lawyer Last year The American Lawyer challenged Am Law 200 attorneys to meet a minimum annual standard of 20 hours' pro bono work per lawyer. More of them did, albeit barely. Overall, The Am Law 200 had an 8.2 percent gain in the number of lawyers who hit that target. Still, only 37.3 percent of those firms' attorneys reached or exceeded that figure in 2005. As some firms prove, near-total pro bono participation at the 20-hour level is possible, which only underscores how much room for improvement remains. |
|
Miss. Judge Declines to Sanction O'Quinn, Laminack & Pirtle Texas Lawyer A federal judge's findings about suspect diagnoses in thousands of silicosis cases in multidistrict litigation in Texas did not convince a state judge in Mississippi to sanction a Houston firm representing some plaintiffs in those cases. A dozen defendants had filed motions seeking $165,000 in sanctions from O'Quinn, Laminack & Pirtle -- now called the O'Quinn Law Firm -- for allegedly pursuing frivolous claims on behalf of clients and submitting allegedly unreliable diagnoses to support those claims. |
|
|
| Entertainment July 11, 2006 JURY IN MICHAEL JACKSON LAWSUIT HEARS POP STAR'S TELEPHONE MESSAGES Associated Press Jurors in a civil lawsuit against Michael Jackson heard increasingly frantic phone messages that the singer left for a business associate, demanding action on projects including a collaboration with actor Marlon Brando and the release of a charity recording. http://news.lp.findlaw.com/ap/o/51/07-06-2006/ca4700253d21cce4.html STEINBECK'S SON WINS RIGHTS TO DAD'S WORK Associated Press Thomas Steinbeck grew up in a home wallpapered with bookcases and inhabited by a father who was one of the most prolific writers of the 20th century. http://news.lp.findlaw.com/ap/o/632/07-10-2006/261e001a32340983.html BRIGITTE NIELSEN TAKES THE FIFTH E! Online Brigitte Nielsen has gone from The Surreal Life to surreal wife. The serial bride and former Mrs. Sly Stallone has tied the knot for the fifth time, wedding Mattia Dessi in Malta Saturday. http://www.eonline.com/News/Items/0,1,19457,00.html |
Washington Post TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS July 10, 2006
TODAY'S HIGHLIGHTS
Washingtonpost Scores Of Sunnis Killed in Baghdad
Scores Of Sunnis Killed in Baghdad
BAGHDAD, July 9 -- Shiite Muslim
militiamen rampaged through a Sunni Arab
neighborhood in Baghdad early Sunday morning, killing more than 50 people and
discarding bodies in the streets, according to Iraqi officials and witnesses.
Hours later,
attackers struck back, detonating two car bombs near a...
(By Joshua Partlow and Saad al-Izzi, The
Washington Post)
Well-Paid Benefit Most As Economy Flourishes
Trend Is Pronounced In Washington Area
(The Washington Post)
The
Golden Boot
Italy Leaves Its Shootout Failures in
Past To Defeat France in Championship Match
(The Washington Post)
More
Today's Highlights
POLITICS
Hoekstra Urges Bush to Impart Intelligence Details
The Bush administration briefed top
lawmakers on a significant intelligence program
only after a key Republican committee chairman angrily complained of being left
in the
dark, the chairman said yesterday.
(By Charles Babington, The Washington
Post)
$2
Million Payment to Former Lobbyist Raises Eyebrows
(The Washington Post)
In
YouTube Clips, a Political Edge
(The Washington Post)
Hatch
Helps Out Fellow Musician in a Jam
(The Washington Post)
Hoekstra Urges Bush to Impart Intelligence Details
(The Washington Post)
More
Politics
NATION
Bringing the Church to the Courtroom
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- A 29-foot war
memorial shaped like a cross should be allowed to remain on public land. A
teacher should be able to emphasize references to God in the Declaration of
Independence. Protesters should be permitted to approach women near the doors of
an abortion clinic.
(By Peter Slevin, The Washington Post)
A
Little Town To Call His Own
After Buying Much Of Martindale, Tex.,
Owner Dreams Big
(The Washington Post)
Research Shifts at Space Station
(The Washington Post)
NATION IN BRIEF
(The Washington Post)
Four
More GIs Charged With Rape, Murder
Fifth Soldier in Iraq Accused of
Dereliction of Duty for Failing to Report Incident
(The Washington Post)
More
Nation
WORLD
Mexican Runner-Up Files Legal Challenge
MEXICO CITY, July 9 -- Legal advisers to
the presidential election runner-up, Andrιs Manuel Lσpez Obrador, gathered
Sunday evening at a polling place guarded by soldiers toting machine guns and
filed a formal challenge to Mexico's vote results.
(By Manuel Roig-Franzia, The Washington
Post)
In
Tibet, Dalai Lama Continues to Hold Sway
China Wary of Exiled Spiritual Leader's
Politics
(The Washington Post)
Scores Of Sunnis Killed in Baghdad
Neighborhood Residents Describe Signs of
Torture
(The Washington Post)
Pope
Takes His Family Message to Spain
Benedict Stresses Traditional Values at
Mass After Meeting With Socialist Leaders
(The Washington Post)
In
Rome and Beyond, Merriment Maximus
After Watching a Dramatic Win, Fans Fill
Italy's Streets With Joy
(The Washington Post)
More
World
| Washington Post | ||||
|
TODAY'S ...
Comics | Crosswords | Sudoku | Horoscopes | Movie Showtimes | Most E-mailed Articles | Tom Toles Editorial Cartoons and Sketches | Traffic | TV Listings | Weather |
||||
|
|
||||

Thomas - Legislative Information on the Internet
|
Check Your Credit Score
|
UN
Treaty Reference Guide
Directory of Medical Dictionaries
| California Injury (Torts) Law
| Yaazoo!
USA Entertainment.US |
FederalCriminalProcedure.Com
| United Statea News |
Travel
|
Shopping
FederalCriminalProcedure.Com
|
iLaw
Dictionary.Com |
Library of Congress
|
United States Law Consumer Law |
USA Entertainment.US |
United States News
iBusiness
Center.US |
United States Law: Constitutional Law: Constitutions of The World
California
Contracts Law.Com | California Injury (Torts) Law
|
Advanced Trial
Handbook
Phone Directories From Around the World New |
California Law Revision Commission
|
Federal Courts
California Civil
Procedure.Com |
Advanced Trial
Handbook-Ervin A. Gonzalez, Esq.
Yaazoo! |
Abogados Latinos
| United States History |
Spanish |
Federal Courts
|
Federal Rules of Evidence
![]()