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TODAY'S Legal News STORIES - August 17, 2006 E-mail a postcard to someone special
 

August 17, 2006  
•  Suspect: JonBenet Death An 'Accident'
A former American schoolteacher said publicly he was with JonBenet Ramsey when she was killed and called the 6-year-old's death "an accident." The stunning admission should help answer 10 years of questions in the unsolved murder case.   More...


•  South Lebanon Power Transfer Begins
•  Feds Land A Big Fish
•  Jill Carroll: Her Family's Ordeal
•  Sick Teen Allowed To Forgo Chemo

August 17, 2006 • Section Front
•  Bomb-Sniffing Dogs Close Seattle Port
Authorities set up a half-mile perimeter around a terminal at the city's port Wednesday after bomb-sniffing dogs indicated that at least one container recently unloaded from a ship could contain explosives.  More...


•  Suspect: JonBenet Death An 'Accident'
•  Wildfire Threatens Wyoming Homes
•  Feds Land A Big Fish
•  9/11 Tapes Evoke Horror, Heartbreak

 August 17, 2006 • Section Front
•Jill Carroll: Her Family's Ordeal
What do you say to your daughter's kidnappers? This was the tough question Christian Science Monitor Jill Carroll's parents faced, as they balanced advice from all quarters. Part IV of Carroll's story sheds light on that struggle.  More...


•  GI Killed In Afghan Mine Accident
•  Ethiopia Floods Kill More Than 625
•  South Lebanon Power Transfer Begins
•  Britain OKs Extended Terror Detentions

August 17, 2006 • Section Front
•  Allen Comments Draw Fierce Backlash
Following an apology for a comment he made about Jim Webb's campaign worker, Sen. George Allen, R-Va., is taking the heat from the media and the Indian-American community.  More...


•  Congressman Helps Deliver Own Son
•  Lawsuit Filed Over Immigrant Crackdown
•  Carter's Son Wins Nev. Senate Primary
•  Gerald Ford Checks In To Mayo Clinic

      August 17, 2006
Politics
  • Ex-New York Mayor Giuliani Visits S.C.
  • U.S. senator to visit Africa, father's homeland

    Civil Rights
  • Missouri to appeal ruling in inmate abortion case
  • Court Pact Says Va. Teen Can Forgo Chemo

    Personal Injury
  • Subway fire in New York forces thousands to evacuate 2 trains, minor injuries reported
  • Wis. Man Dies in Wood Chipper

    Business
  • Court grants bankruptcy request from owners in U.S. nightclub fire case

    Cyberspace Law
  • Business Lessons from AOL's Search Data Mishap
  •      August 17, 2006
        

    Product Liability

  • Merck failed to warn doctors about Vioxx, jury finds
  • Product Recalls

    Immigration
  • Immigrants Sue New Orleans Hotelier
  • 2 Miami men charged with smuggling Cuban migrants

    Labor and Employment
  • Jobless claims drop by largest amount in a month

    Guns
  • Judge refuses New Orleans' request to dismiss lawsuit by gun owners' lobbying groups
  •      August 17, 2006
    Crime & Trials
  • Suspect Claims Ramsey's Death Accidental
  • 'A very long 10 years' - Ramsey family says arrest brings long-sought relief, vindication

    Entertainment
  • Jennifer Aniston denies reports of engagement to Vince Vaughn

    Sports
  • Feds ask again to jail Bonds' trainer if he refuses to testify
  • Father-in-law of cyclist Landis found dead in San Diego
  •     
      August 17, 2006
    At 3rd Circuit, Topless Bar Topples Lewdness Law
    The Legal Intelligencer

    A Philadelphia topless bar has toppled a half-century old Pennsylvania statute that prohibits "lewd" entertainment in any venue that has a liquor license with its victory in a federal appeals court that struck the law down as unconstitutionally overbroad. The 3rd Circuit found that the statute violates the First Amendment because it could apply not only to strip clubs but also to ordinary theater, concerts or other similar forms of entertainment in establishments with liquor licenses.
     
       
    Could Supreme Court Settle Presidential Signing Scrap?
    Legal Times/August 17, 2006

    Debate over President George W. Bush's frequent and aggressive use of statements to signal that he might not enforce bills he has signed has gained momentum over recent months. A milestone in the dispute came at the ABA's annual convention, with the overwhelming approval of a strongly worded resolution opposing the "misuse" of presidential signing statements as "contrary to the rule of law and our constitutional system of separation of powers." The controversy could careen toward the Supreme Court itself.
     
       
      August 17, 2006
    Will Selective Waiver Become a Reality Under Proposed Rule 502?
    Business Crimes Bulletin

    This summer, proposed Federal Rule of Evidence 502, which addresses privilege waivers arising from the production of documents, has been published for public comment. The rule would broadly authorize "selective waiver" by allowing a person or entity to disclose protected information to the government during an investigation without waiving privilege. The SEC has twice tried, and failed, to codify selective waivers and the federal circuits are split on their use. But would Rule 502 resolve all the issues?
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         Legal News STORIES - August 16, 2006
    August 16, 2006  
    •  Israel: Troops Could Stay For Months
    Israel's top general says his troops will remain in Lebanon for months more, until the United Nations can assemble and deploy its peacekeeping force. A day earlier, Lt. Gen. Dan Halutz had said Israel would be out of Lebanon in 7 to 10 days.  More...


    •  Carroll: Captors Tried To Convert Me
    •  Secret Service Agents Arrest NBA Star
    •  Russia Fires On Japanese Fishing Boat
    •  Gerald Ford Admitted To Mayo Clinic

    August 16, 2006 • Section Front
    •  NYC To Release More Sept. 11 Calls
    The voices of firefighters who rescued people from the burning World Trade Center hold clues about what happened on Sept. 11, but until now, many went unheard. Officials plan to publicly play voices on hundreds of emergency calls for the first time.   More...


    •  Subpoena Upheld In Bonds Leak Case
    •  Weeding Out Terrorists
    •  Hinckley Wants More Time With Parents
    •  Gerald Ford Admitted To Mayo Clinic

    August 16, 2006 • Section Front
    •  Is Prostate Cancer Overtreated?
    More than half of men with low-risk prostate cancer are overtreated with surgery or radiation therapy, a University of Michigan study shows.   More...


    •  Depression In Pregnancy Undertreated?
    •  Study: Coffee May Trigger Heart Attack
    •  1 in 10 Truckers May Drive Sleepy
    •  Rep. Cardin: We'll Beat Cancer By 2015

    August 16, 2006 • Section Front
    •  Secret Service Agents Arrest NBA Star
    Secret Service agents arrested NBA player Lonny Baxter for reports of shots fired from a vehicle two blocks from the White House, a Secret Service spokesman said. Baxter, 27, of the Charlotte Bobcats, was taken into custody around 2:30 a.m.   More...


    •  Pavarotti: 'God Helps Me Fight Cancer'
    •  Subpoena Upheld In Bonds Leak Case
    •  Sabado Gigante Keeps On Rolling
    •  Elvis' Golden Anniversary On TV

    August 16, 2006
    Consumer Lawsuits Against Credit Bureaus Are Multiplying
    The National Law Journal

    The nation's top three credit bureaus are facing a growing number of lawsuits filed by consumers who claim that the bureaus -- Equifax, TransUnion and Experian -- are engaging in a practice that artificially lowers their credit scores, and that they are ignoring pleas to remove inaccurate information from the reports. Fears about identity theft are making consumers more vigilant about spotting errors, and some plaintiffs lawyers say corrections come only after a lawsuit is filed.
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      August 16, 2006
    Unusual Cert Petition Deals With Certified Queries, Theories and 'Erie'
    The Legal Intelligencer

    As USX Corp. sees it, federal appellate courts should get out of the business of predicting state law and instead should certify questions to state Supreme Courts whenever a case hinges on an unanswered question of state law. In an unusual petition for certiorari, USX is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to "implement a presumption in favor of certifying substantial unanswered questions of state law." The petition comes on the heels of a 3rd Circuit ruling that overturned a $2.2 million judgment in USX's favor.
     
       
      August 16, 2006
    New Jersey AG Resigns After Boyfriend's Traffic Stop Raises Ethics Issues
    The Associated Press

    New Jersey's attorney general resigned Tuesday after a special prosecutor concluded she violated state ethics laws by intervening in a traffic stop involving her boyfriend, lawyer Hamlet Goore. In recent weeks, Zulima Farber denied doing anything to influence the police, but the special prosecutor found that she "knowingly acted to secure a benefit for Mr. Goore that was violative of the motor vehicle laws and obviously not available to the general public." Farber will step down at the end of the month.
     
       
      August 16, 2006
    ABA Criticizes Government on Legal Fees Advancement Policy
    New York Law Journal

    The American Bar Association's House of Delegates last week passed a resolution opposing the U.S. Justice Department's "Thompson Memorandum" guidelines. The ABA stated that it opposes government policies that have the effect of "eroding" the legal rights of employees, specifically criticizing the government's consideration of whether a company provided counsel or legal fees to an employee in evaluating corporate cooperation with its investigations.
     
       
      August 16, 2006
    Phoning Home: Good for E.T., Not for Criminal Defendants
    The Recorder

    Clifton Terrell Jr.'s story may serve as a lesson to murder suspects everywhere: Resist the urge to call your mother. When he was tried in San Francisco Superior Court for killing the son of a state senator, the trial court excluded Terrell's confession to police. But the court allowed the prosecution to use a secretly recorded phone call Terrell made to relatives right after his interrogators left the room. "He tried to grab the gun, and I pulled away and it went off," he told his mother.
     
       
         August 16, 2006
        

    Labor and Employment

  • Tyco Pensioners Granted Class Action
  • Cop Whistle-Blower Awarded $3.7 Million

    Cyberspace Law
  • Former BetOnSports CEO Free on Bail
  • AOL prepares to dig for gold at home of spammer's parents

    Environment
  • DNA Helps Nab Illegal Shark Fin Traders
  • L.A. Sues Over Sewage Dumping Ban

    Tobacco
  • Cities in Cigarette Litter Program
  •     
    Politics
  • N.J. Attorney General Quits Over Ethics
  • U.S. senator apologizes for remarks aimed at Indian American volunteer working for opponent

    Personal Injury
  • Judge rules that Mississippi homeowner's insurance policy excluded flood damage from Katrina
  • Hundreds of homes evacuated near Casper, Wyoming, as wind whips up wildfire

    Telecommunications
  • Wiretap Fallout: Suits Against Telecoms Gain New Life in California
  • Sept. 11 World Trade Center emergency calls being released

    Iraq
  • Bombings Kill at Least 19 in Baghdad
  •      Legal News STORIES - August 15, 2006
    August 15, 2006  
    •  Israel Begins Lebanon Pullback
    The cease-fire appears to be holding between Israel and Hezbollah. Israeli forces have withdrawn from their deepest point in southern Lebanon, signaling the beginning of the end of a brief occupation of the region.  More...


    •  Jill Carroll: They Thought I Was A Spy
    •  Dell To Recall 4M Laptop Batteries
    •  Census: Diversity Growing In 49 States
    •  2 Fox News Reporters Kidnapped In Gaza

    August 15, 2006  
    •  Census: Diversity Growing In 49 States
    America's diversity has reached nearly all states. From South Carolina's immigrant population to the fast-rising number of Hispanics in Ark., minority groups make up an increasing share of the population in every state but one, Census figures show.  More...


    •  Poll: Americans Back Air Restrictions
    •  FEMA: Same Key Opens Multiple Trailers
    •  Dell To Recall 4M Laptop Batteries
    •  Positive Signs For Barbaro

    August 15, 2006  
    •  Jill Carroll: They Thought I Was A Spy
    It isn't something the Carroll family made a focus in the life of the girl who would grow up to be a reporter kidnapped, and eventually freed, in Iraq. But Baghdad, her mother says, wasn't her first scrape with abduction.  More...


    •  Israel Begins Lebanon Pullback
    •  2 Fox News Reporters Kidnapped In Gaza
    •  Nearly 300 Dead In Chinese Typhoon
    •  Following The Terror Money Trail

    August 15, 2006  
    •  Bush: 'We Live In Troubled Times'
    On his first day back from vacation, President Bush was conferring with his top defense advisers on such hot spots as Iraq and the Middle East. "We live in troubled times," he said but expressed confidence about protecting the U.S. from harm.  More...


    •  Lamont Fires Back At Cheney, Lieberman
    •  Poll: Americans Back Air Restrictions
    •  VA To Improve Computer Security
    •  Ohio Rep. Ney Asks Off The Ballot

    August 15, 2006  
    •  Dell To Recall 4M Laptop Batteries
    Dell says it's recalling 4.1 million notebook computer batteries because they can overheat and catch fire.   More...


    •  Segway Launches Overhauled Scooter
    •  New Technology = Lower Phone Bills
    •  Relaxing With Alaska's Big Brown Bears
    •  Pluto's Planet Status Up In The Air
     

    August 15, 2006  
    •  Tragedy On Jennifer Garner Film Set
    An assistant propmaster for "The Kingdom," a movie starring Jennifer Garner and Jamie Foxx, died of injuries suffered in an automobile crash on the film's Phoenix location.  More...


    •  Couric: People Want More Evening News
    •  Hudson And Robinson Separate
    •  Positive Signs For Barbaro
    •  TomKat To The Rescue

        
         August 15, 2006
    Untested Conspiracy Theory Seeks to Expand DUI Liability
    The National Law Journal

    If an untested and novel legal theory succeeds, the wife and brother of a binge drinker with a string of drunken driving arrests could be held civilly liable for the death of a bicyclist because they supplied the car, insurance and alcohol to the driver. The California case uses a conspiracy theory to expand third-party liability as a means to avoid traditional limits on culpability under state dram-shop laws. The theory may be a long shot, but a state judge has allowed the suit to proceed to discovery.
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      August 15, 2006
    Former WilmerHale Star Resigns From Bar in Disgrace
    New York Law Journal

    A former rising star in the IP practice of WilmerHale has resigned from the bar after admitting to a litany of misconduct, including falsifying expense reports, forging client signatures and assigning associates to perform "pro bono" work for friends and family. William P. DiSalvatore, who resigned his position as a partner in WilmerHale's New York office in January, offered to resign from the bar in May as he was facing a disciplinary investigation that would have likely led to his disbarment.
     
       
     
      August 15, 2006
    Man Admits Threatening to Murder Federal Judge
    New York Law Journal

    A New York man has admitted that he threatened to kill a judge and use a bomb to blow up the federal courthouse in Brooklyn. Wazir Khan sent letters and made phone calls to Judge Raymond Dearie's chambers, starting in 2005. He said the judge would be killed "just like Atlanta," a reference to the shooting of a judge by a man on trial for rape, and that he had smuggled a gun into the courthouse and put a bomb on the floor where Dearie's courtroom was located. Khan faces between 57 and 71 months in prison.
     
       
      August 15, 2006
    Chicago Foie Gras Ban Sends Liver Lovers on Feeding Frenzy
    The Associated Press

    With Chicago's ban on foie gras, made of liver from force-fed ducks and geese, just days away, restaurants are serving it like never before, and worrying about the ban's ramifications. "Now it becomes ... a constitutional thing," said chef Rick Tramonto. "My biggest concern is where it will stop." A group of foie gras-related businesses have formed the North American Foie Gras Association and hired a lobbyist to make their case as other cities, including Philadelphia, contemplate following Chicago's lead.
     
       
     
         Legal News STORIES - August 14, 2006
    August 14, 2006  
    •  Mideast Cease-Fire Takes Hold
    There were minor violations, but overall, the fighting between Israel and Hezbollah has stopped. Lebanese civilians are beginning to return to their homes, and Israelis are leaving their bomb shelters.  More...


    •  The Jill Carroll Story: Part 1
    •  Cuban Paper Shows New Castro Photos
    •  Britain Downgrades Terror Threat Level
    •  Blasts Strike Baghdad Neighborhood

    August 14, 2006 • Section Front
    •  1,000 Phones Lead To Terror Arrests
    The Coast Guard has boosted security near the Mackinac Bridge in Michigan after prosecutors said they believe three men arrested after being found in possession of 1,000 cell phones were targeting the bridge.   More...


    •  Boy Dies At Military Academy Camp
    •  Indiana House Fire Kills At Least 4
    •  U.S. Issues New Air-Security Rules
    •  Legal Defender Of Poor Under Scrutiny

    August 14, 2006 • Section Front
    •  Iranian Leader Opens Up
    Mike Wallace is back from Tehran, where he obtained an exclusive interview with Iran's outspoken president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.   More...


    •  Report: The U.S. Pushed Israeli Plan
    •  Britain Downgrades Terror Threat Level
    •  Mideast Cease-Fire Takes Hold
    •  Afghan Insurgents Clash With Police

    August 14, 2006  
    •  Bush Tried To Cut Bomb Detection Funds
    As the British terror plot was unfolding, the Bush administration quietly tried to take away $6 million that was supposed to be spent this year developing new explosives detection technology.  More...


    •  Washington Plays Terror Plot Politics
    •  Using 'Speaker Pelosi' As Scare Tactic
    •  Bush, Dems Talk Terror Policies
    •  U.S. Relaxes Cuban Immigration Rules

         August 14, 2006
    Crime & Trials
  • Judge orders voice samples of three charged in Coke secrets case
  • Ex-SLA Member Feels Paranoid in Prison

    Entertainment
  • Film director Spike Lee amazed by devastation of New Orleans after hurricane
  • Author Nora Ephron says third time's the charm in marriage

    Sports
  • Suspected doping equipment found near hotels used by athletes at European Championships
  • Inquest rules pilot error caused crash that killed South Africa cricketer

  • Politics
  • TSA Eases Some Carry-On Baggage Rules
  • Gas Prices Inch Up to Hit Another High

    Civil Rights
  • Man Mocks Muslim Candidate at His Home

    Personal Injury
  • US boy who died while camping refused food, says father of other cadets
  • Transit buses collide in downtown L.A., 1 slams into parking garage; 11 people injured

    Iraq
  • Carroll Recalls Pleading for Quick Death
  • Iraqis face worst energy crisis since 2003, despite oil riches
  • August 14, 2006
    D.C. Police: Site of Lawyer's Murder Shows Signs of Tampering
    Legal Times

    The crime scene where murdered Washington lawyer Robert Wone was discovered earlier this month had been tampered with before police arrived, according to an affidavit for a warrant to search the office of D.C. lawyer Joseph Price. Arent Fox partner Price owns the home in which Wone's body was found on Aug. 2. Police have yet to close their investigation and maintain that witness accounts from that evening aren't adding up. Wone was GC for Radio Free Asia and a former associate at Covington & Burling.
     
       
      August 14, 2006
    A Look Ahead to First Oral Arguments of New Supreme Court Term
    Special to Law.com

    As we draw ever closer to the beginning of the U.S. Supreme Court's October 2006 term, appellate litigator Howard J. Bashman pauses to give us a glimpse of the oral arguments at the top of the justices' calendar. From sentencing to patent royalties to telecom disputes, the start of the new term offers a variety of issues. Bashman also predicts that the 9th Circuit is on its way to being reversed in at least three of the four cases to be argued in October.
     
       
      August 14, 2006
    N.Y. Panel Disbars Defense Lawyer for 14 Actions
    New York Law Journal

    A lawyer accused of providing an incompetent defense in a high-profile murder case has been disbarred for misleading and stealing from clients. Carlos Perez-Olivo made headlines after he allegedly forgot part of his closing argument in the defense of Elio Cruz, who was subsequently convicted in the shooting of his wife's lover on a Manhattan subway platform. A New York appellate panel said Perez-Olivo had committed at least 14 acts of misconduct in the representation of four other criminal defendants.
     
       
     

         Legal News STORIES - August 11, 2006

    August 11, 2006  
    •  Suspects' Names Fuels Pakistan Link
    British officials identified 19 of the suspects accused of plotting to blow up U.S.-bound aircraft, making public a list of names that fueled suspicions of a Pakistan connection. Five have been arrested in Pakistan as suspected plot "facilitators."  More...


    •  Feds Order Tougher Pipeline Tests
    •  U.S. Knew Of Plot 'For Days'
    •  Report: Teachers Distributed Unfairly
    •  Kaiser To Pay $2M In Transplant Mess

    August 11, 2006 • Section Front
    •  Typhoon Death Toll Hits 111 In China
    China's death toll from Typhoon Saomai rose to 111 as the most powerful storm to strike the country in five decades churned across the southeast, wrecking houses and capsizing ships, state media reported.  More...


    •  Suspects' Names Fuels Pakistan Link
    •  Israel Renews Attacks On Beirut Suburb
    •  Deadly Blast At Iraq Shiite Shrine
    •  Hot Temps Chill Nuclear Power's Appeal

    August 11, 2006 • Section Front
    •  U.S. Knew Of Plot 'For Days'
    The CIA, the Homeland Security Department, and several top lawmakers knew for days of the terror plot President Bush says shows the U.S. is at war with Islamic fascists who will use any means to destroy those who love freedom.   More...


    •  Report: Teachers Distributed Unfairly
    •  Feds Order Tougher Pipeline Tests
    •  Lieberman Kicks Off His Next Campaign
    •  Espionage Act Upheld For Lobbyists

    August 11, 2006 • Section Front
    •  Kaiser To Pay $2M In Transplant Mess
    Kaiser Permanente has agreed to pay a $2 million fine over allegations that the health maintenance organization mismanaged a kidney transplant program and endangered hundreds of patients.  More...


    •  Sugary Drinks May Spark Weight Gain
    •  Centenarians Reveal Keys To Long Life
    •  Bird Flu Monitoring Goes Nationwide
    •  Religious Belief May Affect Well-Being

         August 11, 2006
    Politics
  • Judge Strikes Down Md. Early Voting Law
  • Judge: Kentucky governor cannot be prosecuted while in office

    Civil Rights
  • Judge Won't Dismiss Pro-Israel Spy Case
  • Young gay activists prepare to campaign against US military's 'don't ask, don't tell' policy

    Immigration
  • Indictment charges Wichita firm with hiring illegal immigrants
  • Guard Member Dies on Border Duty

    Labor and Employment
  • Cops Suspended Over Video Parody Sue
  • Kaiser Aluminum's Termination of Four Pension Plans Upheld
  •      August 11, 2006
    Crime & Trials
  • California jury recommends death penalty for trucker convicted of slaying 4 women
  • Former Coke Staffer Wants Own Trial

    Entertainment
  • Carmen Electra files for divorce from Dave Navarro
  • Judge awards $95,000 in legal fees to Woody Allen

    Sports
  • Internet gambling site BetOnSports shutting down U.S.-focused operations over fraud indictment
  • Injured NHL Player Not Entitled to Coverage From League Insurers
  •   August 11, 2006
    Woody Allen Awarded $95,000 in Attorney Fees
    New York Law Journal

    Director Woody Allen has won a round in his seemingly unending legal tug-of-war with his former producer Jean Doumanian and her production company Magnolia Productions. Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Bernard J. Fried has ordered Doumanian to pay Allen attorney fees and costs of more than $95,000. Doumanian made several objections to the motion for attorney fees, including that it was unreasonable for Loeb & Loeb to use two partners to prepare its motion to enforce the original settlement.
     
       
      August 11, 2006
    Intimidation Alleged in High-Stakes Patent Case
    The National Law Journal

    Kenyon & Kenyon faces sanctions, including the possibility of removal from a case, for alleged witness intimidation in a high-stakes federal patent case involving the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ImClone Systems and Repligen. At the oral arguments, Fish & Richardson lawyers representing MIT and Repligen alleged that a Kenyon attorney intimidated a star witness in a deposition. Judge Richard G. Stearns will decide whether to disqualify the firm at a hearing Aug. 25.
     
       
      August 11, 2006
    Teen Sues Mother for ID of Father
    The National Law Journal

    In a case that family law experts fear could set a dangerous precedent, a Michigan teenager is suing his mother to learn the identity of his father. Attorneys say the issue is a new area of law and, depending on how the judge rules in the case, courts nationally could see a new flood of lawsuits of children suing their parents. "Too few future cases would be about legitimate health concerns, and too many would be an unhappy ex-husband manipulating a child," says family law practitioner Laura Morgan.
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      Legal News STORIES - August 10, 2006
    August 10, 2006  
    •  Air Terror Plot Foiled In London
    Police in London say they have thwarted a plot to simulanteously blow up a number of planes over the Atlantic while flying to the U.S. Of the 21 suspects under arrest, a dozen are said to have been "very close" to success in their plot.  More...


    •  Israel Delays Push But Keeps Hitting
    •  3 Ex-Software Execs Charged With Fraud
    •  Marines Arrest 4 In Carroll Kidnapping
    •  Google Declares War On Badware

    August 10, 2006  
    •  3 Missing Egyptian Students In Custody
    Three of the 11 Egyptian students who went missing after arriving in the United States have been taken into custody for violating the terms of a student visa. One was found in Minnesota; two turned themselves into New Jersey authorities.   More...


    •  Air Terror Plot Foiled In London
    •  Robin Williams In Alcohol Rehab
    •  Google Declares War On Badware
    •  Pakistani-Born Pilot Sues JetBlue

    August 10, 2006  
    •  Israel Delays Push But Keeps Hitting
    The wider ground offensive is on hold to give diplomatic efforts a chance, but Israeli missiles have hit Beirut itself for the first time and troops seized a key town. Hezbollah claims it destroyed 13 Israeli tanks.  More...


    •  Air Terror Plot Foiled In London
    •  Iranian Leader Speaks To Mike Wallace
    •  Wal-Mart Nears Unionization In China
    •  Tokyo Tops 'Big Mac' Survey

    August 10, 2006  
    •  Dems Back Lamont, Shun Lieberman Bid
    Ned Lamont pocketed the support of Democratic Party leaders after a primary victory fueled by opposition to the war in Iraq. Defeated Sen. Joe Lieberman filed petitions to run as an independent and vowed, "I'm definitely going forward."  More...


    •  Dems Criticize Arnold's Heat Response
    •  Alaska Governor Freezes State Hiring
    •  Mayor Seeks DeLay Seat As Write-In
    •  Part Of Boston's Big Dig Reopens

    August 10, 2006  
    •  Robin Williams In Alcohol Rehab
    Actor-comedian Robin Williams is seeking treatment for alcoholism, according to his publicist.   More...


    •  L.A. Judge To Decide Jackson Case
    •  Travis Barker Files For Divorce
    •  'WTC' Opens, Viewers React
    •  'Fake' Voices Are Big Business

         August 10, 2006
    Politics
  • Bush promises government will remain vigilant against terrorist attack
  • Proposed War Crimes Act protection for Bush administration would apply retroactively

    Civil Rights
  • ACLU cites gross neglect in post-Katrina conditions at New Orleans jail
  • US veterans who had data lost by government agency will receive credit protection

    Immigration
  • Feds Target Migrants ordered Deported
  • U.S. attorney general issues new regulations for immigration judges
  •     
         August 10, 2006
    Legal Commentary
  • Hamilton: Churches and Eminent Domain: A Move in Congress to Once Again Make Churches Privileged Landowners

    International Law
  • Israel Stopping Offensive Until Weekend
  • SKorea will provide official aid to North Korea despite no-aid pledge over missile crisis

    War on Terrorism
  • U.S. raises airline threat to highest level in response to British threat
  • Britain thwarts terror plot to simultaneously blow up several aircraft

    Iraq
  • Iraqi officials: 1,500 died violently in Baghdad last month
  •   August 10, 2006
    Panel Admonishes Wash. Judge Who Urged Courtroom to Say 'Go Seahawks'
    The Associated Press

    A state panel has disciplined a Washington judge who ordered cheers in court for the Super Bowl-bound Seattle Seahawks before issuing a manslaughter sentence. Judge Beverly Grant asked about 100 people to say "Go Seahawks" before taking their seats, then repeated the request after being dissatisfied with the low volume of the response. That same day, Grant sentenced a defendant to 13 1/2 years for a shooting death. She later apologized for the cheer and filed the formal conduct complaint against herself.
     
       
     
      August 10, 2006
    2nd Circuit Declines to Back Jury Instruction Mandate
    New York Law Journal

    Judges prodding divided jurors to reach a verdict do not necessarily have to tell them to follow their consciences, according to a federal appeals court. The 2nd Circuit declined to adopt a hard-and-fast rule on the words a judge should use when giving a potentially deadlocked jury a "modified" Allen charge. The court said the standard remained the same under its own case law and that of the Supreme Court: The instructions must be evaluated in context and under all the circumstances.
     
       
      August 10, 2006
    Former GC Among Comverse Executives Facing Backdating Charges
    New York Law Journal

    Three former top executives at Comverse Technology, including the company's former top lawyer, have been charged with fraudulently manipulating the dates on stock options. In a complaint unsealed Wednesday, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York alleges that the former CEO, finance chief and senior general counsel of the leading voicemail software manufacturer violated federal law and SEC rules by conspiring to hide the backdating from shareholders and the investing public.
     
       
     

         Legal News STORIES - August 9, 2006

    August 9, 2006  
    •  Marines Arrest 4 In Carroll Kidnapping
    U.S. Marines have arrested four Iraqi men in connection with the kidnapping of journalist Jill Carroll. A spokesman said "sound intelligence" led the Marines to a home west of Baghdad where Carroll may have been held. She was freed last March.  More...


    •  Dems Shy Away From Lieberman
    •  Hezbollah Rejects Cease-Fire Draft
    •  One Of 11 Egyptian Students In Custody
    •  Maurice Clarett Tasered, 4 Guns Found

    August 9, 2006  
    •  One Of 11 Egyptian Students In Custody
    One of the 11 Egyptian students who went missing after arriving in the U.S. has been taken into custody in Minneapolis for violating the terms of a student visa. Officials say there's no indication the men pose any kind of a threat.  More...


    •  Alaska Governor Freezes State Hiring
    •  Pakistani-Born Pilot Sues JetBlue
    •  Landis: Maybe It Was Something I Ate
    •  Part Of Boston's Big Dig Reopens

    August 9, 2006  
    •  U.N.: Darfur Peace Deal 'Doomed'
    A peace deal signed three months ago between Sudan's government and the main rebel group in Darfur has failed to halt violence in the region, the United Nations said, citing an increase in rape and continued attacks by militias and rebel factions.  More...


    •  Iranian Leader Speaks To Mike Wallace
    •  Hezbollah Rejects Cease-Fire Draft
    •  Marines Arrest 4 In Carroll Kidnapping
    •  Mother, Son Hanged By Taliban

       
    •  L.A. Judge To Decide Jackson Case
    The King of Pop is suing a concert promoter to prevent arbitration over a disputed 1999 concert contract.  More...


    •  The 'Bad' Success Of Daniel Powter
    •  Heidi Klum Gets Her Own Bra
    •  Did Paul McCartney Lock Out Heather?
    •  Mel Gibson Tapes Won't Be Released

         August 9, 2006

    Crime & Trials

  • Suspected Phoenix Serial Killers Charged
  • Authorities charge man in U.S. car crash that killed 9 illegal immigrants, injured 12 others

    Entertainment
  • Sheriff Refuses to Release Gibson Tapes
  • Bruce Willis sues former friend for extortion

    Sports
  • TV host Leno grills Landis, who offers another theory on drug test
  • Judge admonished for 'Go Seahawks' Cheer
  •     
        

    Politics

  • Lawyers' group condemns Bush's use of signing statements
  • Lamont Beats Lieberman in Conn. Primary

    Civil Rights
  • Judge rules camping ban near Bush ranch constitutional, blocks protesters from pitching tents
  • Homeless in Mass. Sue Over Library Policy

    Iraq
  • U.S. Army private tells of fear of death in unit involved in alleged rape-slaying
  •      August 9, 2006
    Multimillion-Dollar Dispute Over World Trade Center Insurance Sent to State Court
    New York Law Journal

    A dispute over whether up to $525 million in insurance proceeds has been jeopardized by an agreement reordering ownership rights at the reconstructed World Trade Center site must be decided in state court, a federal judge has ruled. Judge Michael B. Mukasey rebuffed a bid by seven insurance companies to remove to federal court a state lawsuit brought by the Port Authority and developer Larry A. Silverstein seeking a ruling that the new ownership arrangement doesn't affect the insurers' payment obligations.
     
       
     
         August 9, 2006
    ABA Condemns President Bush's Use of Signing Statements
    The Associated Press

    Delegates at the American Bar Association's annual meeting approved on Tuesday a resolution condemning President Bush's practice of writing exceptions to legislation he signs as a way of diluting or changing laws rather than using an outright veto. Bush has written exceptions to some 800 bills, more than all previous presidents combined. The signing statements say the president reserves the right to revise, interpret or disregard measures on national security and constitutional grounds.
     
       
     
         August 9, 2006
    Apple Execs, Former GC Seek Counsel in Face of Backdating Probe
    The Recorder

    For the last few months, the San Francisco U.S. Attorney's Office has been investigating whether Apple, like so many other Silicon Valley companies, changed the dates on stock option grants to employees in order to maximize executive payouts, according to lawyers familiar with the case. That investigation has chugged along quietly, but behind the scenes, Apple and some of its current and former executives, including a former longtime GC, are hiring some prominent attorneys.
     
       
            August 9, 2006

         Legal News STORIES - August 8, 2006

      August 8, 2006  
    •  For A Change, No Change In Rates
    With the economy losing momentum, the Federal Reserve has decided to leave interest rates alone. The decision ended a two-year campaign of rate increases, the longest unbroken stretch of rate hikes in recent history.  More...


    •  Lieberman Accuses Foe Of Hacking Site
    •  Uphill Battle For Mideast Cease-Fire
    •  Phoenix Suspect Was 'Mentally Abusive'
    •  FBI Hunts Hot Oil Killer

    August 8, 2006  
    •  Uphill Battle For Mideast Cease-Fire
    Heavy fighting continued both on the ground and in the air in the Mideast, and the timing of Israel's withdrawal from Lebanon was questioned. Israel said a Lebanese proposal to move troops to the border is "interesting."  More...


    •  Indian Soldiers Tap Yoga, Fight Stress
    •  Insurgent Attacks Kill 31 In Baghdad
    •  U.S. Sets Up Northern Afghan Base
    •  U.S. Told To Keep Hands Off Cuba

    August 8, 2006  
    •  Dixie Chicks Tour Skips Beats
    After slow ticket sales, the Dixie Chicks have canceled 14 tour dates and replaced them with others.  More...


    •  Janet Jackson Is Bikini-Ready In Vibe
    •  WTC Film Hero Too Good To Be True
    •  Songwriters Compete In 'American Idol'
    •  JoJo Takes 'The High Road'

         August 8, 2006
        

    Politics

  • Lieberman re-election bid in Connecticut tops primary elections in 5 U.S. states
  • Texas Republicans Abandon DeLay Fight

    Civil Rights
  • VA: Data for 38,000 Veterans Missing
  • Owner of Los Angeles Clippers sued for housing discrimination

    Personal Injury
  • Worker trapped after concrete wall topples in downtown Phoenix

    Microsoft
  • Microsoft's piracy check draws complaints, lawsuits
  •      August 8, 2006
    7th Circuit Rejects Claims of Age Discrimination in IBM Pension Case
    The Associated Press

    IBM Corp. did not commit age discrimination when it changed its pension coverage to a "cash-balance" plan in the 1990s, the 7th Circuit ruled Monday in an influential case that Big Blue had agreed to settle for up to $1.4 billion if it had lost the appeal. Opponents say the setup denies older workers the gains they would have gotten under traditional pension plans, in which employees amass more retirement benefits during their last years of service.
     
       
      August 8, 2006
    Greenberg Traurig Drawn Into Estate Case
    New York Law Journal

    Greenberg Traurig has become enmeshed in a bitter family feud. Estranged sisters Linda J. Spector and Barbara Berlin were beneficiaries of a trust created by their mother. Shortly after her mother's death, Spector sought to have her then-fiancι, Greenberg partner Albert Jacobs, appointed co-trustee. But a Manhattan appellate court sided with attorney Joel Sankel, the successor designated in trust, who had argued that Spector and Jacobs might be seeking control of the trust to effectively disinherit Berlin.
     
       
      August 8, 2006
    San Diego Sues V&E Alleging Professional Negligence
    Texas Lawyer

    The city of San Diego has sued Vinson & Elkins, alleging the firm failed to fully investigate problems with the city's troubled pension system and provide a "warts and all" report into a $1.4 billion to $2 billion pension funding shortfall. In its complaint seeking at least $10 million in damages, the city alleges V&E overcharged San Diego for the firm's work from 2003 through 2005 and failed to provide a report that would be accepted by the Securities and Exchange Commission.
     
       
      August 8, 2006
    Fired McAfee GC Faces Tough Legal Road
    The Recorder

    Since late 2000, accounting troubles have led several McAfee executives to step down and the company to enter a $50 million settlement with the SEC. Throughout those turmoils, its GC, Kent Hart Roberts, remained unscathed -- until this spring, when McAfee fired Roberts due to stock options backdating issues. His plight vividly illustrates the vulnerability of in-house counsel in the latest dust storm to hit corporate America -- and may have them looking more closely at company indemnification policies.
    Visit In-House Counsel
     
       
     
         Legal News STORIES - August 7, 2006
    August 7, 2006  
    •  Big Crimp In Alaska Oil Supply
    Oil company BP has indefinitely shut down the nation's biggest oilfield after finding a pipeline leak, removing about 8 percent of U.S. oil production and stoking fears that already high gas prices will shoot up further.  More...


    •  Rhode Island Senator Battles For Seat
    •  Israel Intensifies Strikes On Beirut
    •  John Glenn & Wife Home From Hospital
    •  Surprising New Alliance For Bono

     
    •  John Glenn & Wife Home From Hospital
    "I do not recommend you go test your airbags the way we did," says retired astronaut and former senator John Glenn, 85, of the crash he and his wife, Annie, 86, had Friday on the way back from a political fundraiser in Ohio.  More...


    •  Big Crimp In Alaska Oil Supply
    •  Shopping Carts + Kids = Danger?
    •  Surprising New Alliance For Bono
    •  $208M Powerball Prize Won In Wis.

     
    •  Israel Intensifies Strikes On Beirut
    Israeli warplanes repeatedly bombed Beirut's southern suburbs and other areas of Lebanon as fierce fighting also continued between Israeli soldiers and Hezbollah guerrillas. This comes hours before Arab League foreign ministers meet in Beirut.  More...


    •  Cuban VP: Castro Back In 'A Few Weeks'
    •  Iraq: Suicide Bomber Targets Funeral
    •  Japan Marks 61st A-Bomb Anniversary
    •  Report: Most Korean Missiles Worked

         August 7, 2006

        
    DeLay? DeLay Who?
    GOP TO TAKE DELAY CASE TO SUPREME COURT
    Associated Press

    Texas Republicans said they will take their fight to remove indicted former congressman Tom DeLay from the election ballot to the U.S. Supreme Court.

    http://news.lp.findlaw.com/ap/p/620/08-04-2006/f4ac00123a700601.html

    Read the 5th Circuit's Opinion
    http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/data2/circs/5th/0650812cv0p.pdf
    August 7, 2006

    Politics

  • Bush administration pushing for quick approval of cease-fire resolution
  • Administration ready to supply oil if needed to replace lost Alaska crude.

    Civil Rights
  • ABA: Women of Color Leaving Big Firms
  • Conn. Court Lays Off Gay-Marriage Fray

    Immigration
  • Immigrant Trapped in Train Before Rescue

    Business
  • Martha Stewart Settles With SEC
  • Oil Prices Spike on Oil Field Shutdown
  •     
         August 7, 2006
    Suit Against Infants' Tylenol Gets $5 Million Verdict
    The Legal Intelligencer

    A wrongful death action filed by the family of a dead 1-year-old against the makers of Infants' Tylenol has resulted in a $5 million verdict from a Philadelphia jury. Plaintiffs claimed the child died from acetaminophen toxicity after being given dosages of the over-the-counter drug for three days. The family argued that the warning labels and directions on the bottle were not clear. The drug is concentrated to make it easier to administer, which the family did not know, according to their attorney.
     
       
     
      August 7, 2006
    White Supremacist Files $30M Malpractice Suit Against His Former Attorney
    The Associated Press

    White supremacist Matthew Hale, who is serving a 40-year prison sentence for seeking to have U.S. District Judge Joan Humphrey Lefkow murdered, has filed a malpractice lawsuit against his former attorney, Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw partner Thomas Durkin. Hale is seeking $30 million in damages. He alleges that Durkin charged Hale's father legal fees for services that never were performed and claims that Durkin improperly excluded white jurors and worked to get blacks on the jury, which worked against his case.
     
       
      August 7, 2006
    Calif. High Court: No Mystery to Employee's 'At Will' Contract
    The Recorder

    California workers were put on alert by the state Supreme Court on Thursday that at-will jobs are just that: Employers don't need a reason to fire you. The unanimous ruling is a boon for the business community and clarifies an area of the law that had gotten increasingly murky because of conflicting appellate court opinions in recent years. "As long as you use the phrase 'at will,' it means at will," overjoyed defense lawyer Robert Mason III said Thursday.
     
       
      August 7, 2006
    Baker & McKenzie Goes After Potential Infringers the World Over
    The American Lawyer

    In May, Baker & McKenzie sent letters to 4,500 ISPs and Web sites, stating that its client had exclusive broadcast rights to the World Cup and warning of the perils of unauthorized downloading. The firm claims the strategy was a success, but others disagree, including a blog that poked fun at the firm -- to an audience of 1.75 million readers. Between the protections afforded by the Digital Millenium Copyright Act, and the sheer scale of the Internet, was it worth the bad publicity to protect a copyright?
    Visit the IP Law Practice Center
    • SUBSCRIPTION REQUIRED
     
       
     

         Legal News STORIES - August 4, 2006

    August 4, 2006  
    •  Israel Expands Lebanon Bombing
    In a sharp expansion of Israel's bombing of Lebanon, highway bridges were hit for the first time in the Christian heartland north of Beirut. Israel also continued pounding southern Beirut and Hezbollah said it killed 6 Israeli troops near the border.  More...


    •  Meet Joe Lieberman's Worst Nightmare
    •  Flooded El Paso Faces New Threat
    •  Senate Rejects Minimum Wage Hike
    •  Big Bucks Oil Deals Probed

    August 4, 2006 • Section Front
    •  Flooded El Paso Faces New Threat
    It would be like a "tidal wave," says the mayor, if a dam across the border in Mexico gives way. As many as 2,000 people have been evacuated, some of them to the convention center which formerly housed Katrina evacuees.  More...


    •  Heat Wave Finally Breaks
    •  Shooting Tied To Phoenix Serial Killer
    •  Senate Rejects Minimum Wage Hike
    •  Big Bucks Oil Deals Probe

    August 4, 2006 • Section Front
    •  Protests In Mexico Deter Tourists
    Political unrest in Mexico during the July 2 presidential election and growing drug violence have taken a toll on the tourism industry. Thousands of Mexican hotels and restaurants have been hit by cancellations.  More...


    •  Israel Expands Lebanon Bombing
    •  Battle For Baghdad On Horizon
    •  CBS' Kimberly Dozier Leaves Hospital
    •  Tropical Storm Chris Weakens

    August 4, 2006 • Section Front
    •  Israel Is Hooked On Militarism
    The Bush administration's support of Israeli militarism ultimately will make it more difficult to negotiate peace in the Mideast says the Nation. Israel's campaign to crush Hezbollah should not be part of the "war on terror."   More...


    •  Video Made The Terrorist Star
    •  Transcend The Heat
    •  Turning Down The President
    •  State Secret: Is Castro Dead?

         August 4, 2006

    Supreme Court
  • GOP to Take DeLay Case to Supreme Court

    Politics
  • In AP interview, Sen. Clinton recommends that Rumsfeld resign as defense secretary
  • FEC Considers Easing Political Ad Rules

    Civil Rights
  • Vt. Weighs in on Lesbian Custody Fight
  • La. School Board Drops Single Sex Plan
  •      August 4, 2006

    Secrets Revealed in New Roberts Biography
    Legal Times

    Less than a year in office as chief justice, and John Roberts Jr. is already the subject of a biography, complete with behind-the-scenes details and family photos. Never mind that the book is only 44 pages long and its target audience maxes out at middle school-aged children, Supreme Court correspondent Tony Mauro reports that it's a great read and a must-buy for Court-watchers of all ages. Among the burning questions answered: the reason for Roberts' penchant for basic black robes.
     
       

      August 4, 2006

    Calif. Supremes Wait for Smoke to Clear Over Punitive Damages
    The Recorder

    If the U.S. Supreme Court can provide guidance, why not let it? On Wednesday, at the urging of tobacco giant Philip Morris USA, the California Supreme Court put on hold a major punitive damages case to await a ruling by the nation's highest court on identical issues. The state court's 6-0 vote freezes, for now, an April 21 appellate court ruling that OK'd a $28 million punitive damages award against Virginia-based Philip Morris -- an amount 33 times greater than the compensatory damages in the case.
     
       

      August 4, 2006

    Nonprofit Set to Get $9M in DuPont Lead Paint Deal Has Close Ties to Company
    The Associated Press

    When Rhode Island dropped DuPont from its lawsuit against former makers of lead paint last year, the company had agreed to donate $9 million to a nonprofit group focused on preventing childhood exposure to lead. But not generally disclosed were the close ties between DuPont and the Children's Health Forum. Watchdogs say the previously unreported connection casts a cloud over the deal, which let DuPont out of a case that cost other lead paint companies billions of dollars.
     
       

      August 4, 2006

    N.J. Court Overturns $105M Verdict Against Stadium Beer Vendor
    The Associated Press

    A New Jersey appeals court on Thursday overturned a landmark $105 million verdict against a stadium vendor that sold beer to a drunken fan who later paralyzed a girl in an auto wreck. Ordering a new trial, the panel said the trial court improperly allowed testimony about the "drinking environment" at the 1999 football game at Giants Stadium. "The admission of this evidence cannot be considered harmless. A central theme of plaintiffs' case was the culture of intoxication at the stadium," the court wrote.
     
       

         August 4, 2006

    Pentagon GC's Bid for 4th Circuit Seat Threatened
    Corporate Counsel

    Things aren't looking so good for Pentagon GC William Haynes II in his quest for a seat on the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. For more than a year he's drawn scattered attacks, mostly from Democrats, for his 2003 decision to sanction the use of aggressive methods in interrogations. But in July, Haynes started taking fire from a new front. Twenty retired military leaders came out against his nomination, arguing that he ignored the views of other Pentagon lawyers in approving the interrogation procedures.
    Visit In-House Counsel
     
       
     

         Legal News STORIES - August 3, 2006

     
    •  Israel Renews Air Strikes On Beirut
    Three weeks into the conflict, Israeli war planes again bombarded Beirut's southern suburbs. Meanwhile, six Israeli brigades, or roughly 10,000 troops, were in south Lebanon locked in fighting with hundreds of Hezbollah guerrillas.  More...


    •  Eastern U.S. Still Sizzling
    •  Tropical Storm Chris Weakens
    •  Castro's Sister: 'He's Not Dead'
    •  Mel Gibson Charged With Drunk Driving

    • Section Front
    •  Eastern U.S. Still Sizzling
    If you can't stay home or at work inches away from an air conditioner - water fountains, movie theaters and cooling centers are the place to be, with the mercury still hovering in and around 100 in a large chunk of these United States.  More...


    •  Driver + Sandwich = Passenger DUI
    •  Tropical Storm Chris Weakens
    •  Evolution Foes Defeated In Kansas
    •  Mel Gibson Charged With Drunk Drivin

    • Section Front
    •  Castro's Sister: 'He's Not Dead'
    While Fidel Castro has stayed out of public view days after naming his brother acting president, his sister says she has spoken with people who say he is very sick, but not dead. And, a parliament speaker says Castro is "very alive and very alert."   More...


    •  Israel Renews Air Strikes On Beirut
    •  African Refugees Make Old Homes New
    •  Pentagon: Probe Backs Haditha Charges
    •  Tropical Storm Chris Weakens

    • Section Front
    •  Tips, Wages In Play On Capitol Hill
    "Everything that has been achieved in seven states to support low wage workers who earn tips is destroyed by this bill," says Sen. Dianne Feinstein of the minimum wage legislation now before the Senate. A vote is expected by Friday.  More...


    •  U.S. Cash For Cuban Fighters?
    •  Bill Clinton Takes On Climate Change
    •  Bush, Media Bid Press Room Farewell
    •  Evolution Foes Defeated In Kansas

    • Section Front
    •  Mel Gibson Charged With Drunk Driving
    Actor Mel Gibson was charged with misdemeanor drunken driving, having an elevated blood-alcohol level and having an open container of liquor in his car. The charges do not mention his self-described "belligerent behavior" while being arrested.  More...


    •  Nora Ephron On Aging, Her Neck, Life
    •  Aaron Carter Okay After Accident
    •  Rock Hall Celebrates Bob Dylan
    •  Brinkley Emerges From Seclusion

        

         Stock Market Section August 3, 2006

    News Flash: The Market Is Down!
    Motley Fool - USA
    ... Yet one of the most important concepts that we investors need to understand is this: The stock market, especially in the short run, goes up and down. ...
    See all stories on this topic

    Seoul stock market closes up
    Black Enterprise - New York,NY,USA
    SEOUL, Aug. 2 (Xinhua) -- The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) gained 7.75 points to 1,295.11 on Wednesday. The volume ...

    Slight improvement in stock market
    Nepalnews.com - Kathmandu,Nepal
    ... "The monetary policy affects stock market negatively if incomes from shares is expected to reduce in a country like ours where the structure of capital ...
    See all stories on this topic

        
    'Revolutionary change' ahead for domestic stock market
    People's Daily Online - Beijing,China
    The imminent introduction of stock index futures and a mechanism for short selling will fundamentally change China's stock market, according to analysts. ...
    See all stories on this topic
        
      Iraq
  • Senator says U.S. contracting in Iraq `a story of mistakes, waste, greed'
  • Iraq Vows to Handle Security This Year
  •      Legal New Section August 3, 2006

      Crime & Trials
  • 1 defendant in video game slayings gets life; death penalty recommended for 2 others
  • Ohio Court Tosses Woman's Death Sentence
     
  •     
    Immigration
  • Immigrants sue U.S. government over citizenship application delays
  • Fake IDs get undercover border investigators into United States
  •  
    Eight Suits in Embryo Scandal Are Dismissed
    The National Law Journal

    A California judge has granted demurrers in eight lawsuits filed against the University of California, Irvine by patients who claim they were not notified that doctors at the hospital might have stolen their eggs and embryos. The suits are the latest in a medical negligence scandal that made worldwide headlines about a decade ago when three UCI doctors were accused of stealing human eggs and embryos to conduct research or impregnate other women, some of whom gave birth.
     
       
     
    11th Circuit Remands $400,000 in Sanctions Against Employment Lawyers
    Daily Business Review

    The 11th Circuit has overturned nearly $400,000 in sanctions imposed against two Florida employment lawyers for bringing an allegedly frivolous sexual harassment suit against the Denny's restaurant chain. The order by U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard was one of a series of stiff sanctions that many observers said chilled lawyers from bringing such cases in federal court. The 11th Circuit panel found that Lenard committed reversible error when she did not rely on the findings of the magistrate judge.
     
       
        
    Legal Tactics 'R' Us: Internet as Witness Turns Trial
    Legal Tech Newsletter

    When Toysrus.com sued Amazon.com for breach of contract, the legal team from Wildman Harrold in Chicago played a trial trump card: The Internet as witness. To prove Amazon allowed other Web retailers to sell products Toys "R" Us considered "exclusive," counsel decided to risk showing live searches of Amazon.com in court. If identical toys from other retailers showed up, it would be hard testimony to refute. Attorneys Michael Dockterman and John Luburic detail how trial technology isn't all fun and games.
    Visit Legal Technology
     
       
     

         Legal News STORIES - August 2, 2006

     
    •  Israel Strikes Deep Into Lebanon
    The three-week-old war seems more likely to escalate than end soon as Israel launches its deepest ground attack into Lebanon yet and Hezbollah guerrillas respond by firing at least 150 rockets at towns across northern Israel.  More...


    •  Heat Wave Bakes Eastern Half Of U.S.
    •  National Guard General Sounds Warning
    •  Salesman Accused Of Faking Son's Death
    •  Castro: Health Stable, Spirits Good

    • Section Front
    •  Salesman Accused Of Faking Son's Death
    A lawsuit claims an employee at an Atlanta software firm received paid leave for months by claiming his 3-year-old son was dying of cancer, only to be exposed as a fraud when the firm tried to send flowers.  More...


    •  Heat Wave Bakes Eastern Half Of U.S.
    •  The 'Passion' Over Mel's Meltdown
    •  Americans Drinking More Alcohol
    •  Michael Jackson Lawyers Quit, Again

      • Section Front
    •  Castro: Health Stable, Spirits Good
    Fidel Castro, who has wielded absolute power over Cuba for 47 years, remained out of sight while recovering from surgery. Castro said that his health was stable after surgery, according to a statement read on state television.  More...


    •  Israel Strikes Deep Into Lebanon
    •  Where The Bin Laden Trail Goes Cold
    •  70 Killed In Surge Of Iraq Violence
    •  China Slaughters 50,000 Dogs

    • Section Front
    •  Poker Shootout
    While in Vegas for the World Series of Poker, Ken Adams tries his hand at an event that was a bit different from all the other events he had played. It was a "shootout" in which the winner at each of 90 tables moves forward to the next round.  More...


    •  The 'Passion' Over Mel's Meltdown
    •  Michael Jackson Lawyers Quit, Again
    •  Digital Radio Opens New Doors
    •  Elizabeth Hurley To Tie The Knot
     

     
    Legal Commentary
  • Hilden: The Legality of Web "Blacklists": Should It Be Against the Law to List Malpracticing Doctors and Litigation-Happy Patients on the Internet?
  •  

     
    Politics
  • Bush dismisses cease-fire plans as `stopping for the sake of stopping'
  • Senate Democrats Ready $25M Ad Blitz
  •  

     

    Personal Injury
  • U.S. woman sues Bacardi after allegedly being injured by flaming rum
  •  

     
     
     
    N.Y. Panel Disbars Attorney for Forging Judge's Name
    New York Law Journal

    An appeals court in Brooklyn has disbarred an attorney who was convicted of criminal contempt for forging the signature of a Family Court judge during a post-divorce proceeding against her ex-husband. A unanimous panel said that it could not offer a lesser sentence for the attorney, Mary K. Henning, despite her otherwise unblemished record because "her misconduct goes to the heart of the judicial system." Henning denies that she forged the signature, according to her attorney.
     
       
     
    Fourth Socha-Gelbmann Report Sees Growth in EDD's Future
    Law Technology News

    The wait is over. The fourth annual Socha-Gelbmann Electronic Discovery Survey is now available, and can be yours in its entirety for $5,000. Or, if you're comfortable with more of a high-level view, read on. The report's authors present, for your perusal, the highlights of their findings regarding trends and user preferences in the world of electronic data discovery. Included are rankings of top service and software vendors, as well as top providers by litigation stage.
    Visit Legal Technology
     
       
     
    Supreme Court Eases Standard for Title VII Retaliation Claims
    Special to Law.com

    In Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. White, the Supreme Court held that the anti-retaliation provision of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 is broader than Title VII's anti-discrimination provision, resolving differences among the circuit courts of appeal over what constitutes actionable retaliation. Jenner & Block partners Carla J. Rozycki and David K. Haase examine the history of the case, the significance of the ruling and its impact on employers.
    Visit Law.com Legal Technology
     
       
     
    Fourth Socha-Gelbmann Report Sees Growth in EDD's Future
    Law Technology News

    The wait is over. The fourth annual Socha-Gelbmann Electronic Discovery Survey is now available, and can be yours in its entirety for $5,000. Or, if you're comfortable with more of a high-level view, read on. The report's authors present, for your perusal, the highlights of their findings regarding trends and user preferences in the world of electronic data discovery. Included are rankings of top service and software vendors, as well as top providers by litigation stage.
    Visit Legal Technology
     
       
      Legal News STORIES - August 1, 2006
     
    •  Castro Sidelined By Intestinal Surgery
    Fidel Castro has turned over the presidency of Cuba to his 75-year-old brother, Raul - at least temporarily, while he recuperates. It's the first time since 1959 that Castro, the world's longest-ruling president, has not been in charge.  More...


    •  Jewish Cop Busted Mel Gibson
    •  Israel Continues To Hit Hard
    •  Temperatures Soar Across The Nation
    •  Cubans Wonder What's Next

     
    •  Temperatures Soar Across The Nation
    Soaring temperatures are hitting the country again. While the Midwest could get some relief by Wednesday the worst of the heat was expected to drift east, bringing scorching temperatures to New York, Washington and Boston.  More...


    •  Boy, 11, Killed In Road Rage Fight
    •  Graphic 9/11 Trial Exhibits Released
    •  Romney Apologizes For 'Tar Baby'
    •  Mel Gibson In Treatment Program

        
    Poll takes bloom off baby boomers? financial picture
    ChronicleHerald.ca - Halifax,Nova Scotia,Canada
    ... the pressure of balancing the needs of their parents and children with their own future retirement needs, says a recent study produced for BMO Financial Group. ...
    See all stories on this topic
        
    Recruiters see demand grow for financial services staff
    PersonnelToday.com - UK
    Demand for finance staff has increased by 182% in the past six months, according to recruitment consultancy Robert Half Financial Service Group. ...
    See all stories on this topic
     
    Former Willkie Partner Sanctioned for Billing Clients for Private Calls
    New York Law Journal

    A former tax partner at Willkie Farr & Gallagher has been suspended from practice for one year for billing clients for $30,000 worth of personal long-distance calls. The referee who heard the case recommended only a six-month suspension on the grounds that Patrick Carmody had not sought to gain financially from his actions, but to conceal from the firm the time he was spending on non-billable matters. But a four-lawyer panel recommended a one-year suspension, calling Carmody's actions "simple thievery."
     
       
     
    Tort Reform Plan Causes Rough Surf at ABA Meeting
    The National Law Journal

    The American Bar Association House of Delegates is expected to take up some contentious issues at the ABA's annual meeting. But one controversy has served as a prelude to this week's events in Honolulu, as infighting among the Tort Trial and Insurance Practice Section has resulted in the group pulling a tort-reform measure. The proposal has created a sharp divide among members and, at least in one case, between a huge corporate client and its outside law firms as well.
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     Legal News STORIES - July 31, 2006
        
    Save a Cocktail Napkin, Win a Lawsuit
    The National Law Journal

    Idea-submission claims are on the rise in Hollywood, where ideas often are presented informally, leaving a writer without proof when a suspiciously similar project appears. Thanks to Grosso v. Miramax, it's easier to claim idea theft without copyrighted scripts. But the 9th Circuit's ruling conflicts with decisions in the 2nd, 4th and 6th circuits, says Gail Title, who represented Miramax in a brief to the Supreme Court. "There really is a need for guidance in this area," she says.
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    Judge Rejects Executive's 85-Year Guideline Sentence as 'Travesty of Justice'
    New York Law Journal

    A federal judge in New York has defended a non-guideline prison sentence for a former business executive convicted of conspiracy and securities fraud, saying to rule otherwise would be a "travesty of justice." In May, District Judge Jed S. Rakoff sentenced Richard P. Adelson, the former president of Impath Inc., to 42 months in prison, rather than 85 years as prosecutors had suggested in papers. The government filed a notice of appeal, and the judge this month issued a memorandum explaining his decision.
     
       
     
     
    Calif. High Court Slaps Misuse of Anti-SLAPP Laws
    The Recorder

    Former paralegal Peggy Soukup and famed Irish dancer Michael Flatley don't know each other, but they share one thing in common: Both won cases last week clarifying California's complex anti-SLAPP law. By a unanimous vote in two rulings involving three cases, the state Supreme Court ruled that anti-SLAPP motions and their counterparts, SLAPP-back suits, can't be used by defendants to protect speech or activities that are illegal as a matter of law.
     
       

      Stock Market

    Stock Market 2006/07/30
    CBOE, 3 NYSE specialists to form new stock market
    Chicago Tribune - United States
    ... biggest US market for options on stocks and stock indexes, will join with three New York Stock Exchange specialist firms to establish a market for stock trading ...
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    Stock market tipped to start week on a high
    Border Mail - Albury,New South Wales,Australia
    THE share market is expected to enter the first week of the reporting season on a high today, after US stocks lifted on Friday. ...

    Lebanon stock market
    New Zealand Herald - New Zealand
    Lebanon's stock market will reopen this week following two weeks of closure imposed by a war between Israel and Hizbollah guerrillas that has hit the economy ...
    See all stories on this topic

        
       
    •  Heat Wave Rolls Over Plains, Midwest
    Scorching heat built up over the Plains and Midwest as the furnace-like air that blistered California settled over the nation's midsection. Heat warnings were in place from Michigan to Oklahoma, and sections of the northeast are also affected.  More...


    •  Bush, Israel Nix Immediate Cease-Fire
    •  FDA Weighs Morning-After Pill Sales
    •  U.N. Gives Iran Nuke Deadline
    •  NATO Takes Charge In Taliban Hotbed

    • Sectio
    •  Boy, 11, Killed In Road Rage Fight
    A man accused of fatally shooting an 11-year-old boy during a roadside argument was arrested in Virginia. Police say the suspect and the boy’s family were arguing over the use of a turn signal.  More...


    •  Heat Wave Rolls Over Plains, Midwest
    •  D.C. Officials Set Earlier Curfew
    •  Model, 19, Killed In Turnpike Crash
    •  Nevada Wildfire Crews Battle High Wind

     

    •  'Pirates' Hollywood's Summer Savior
    The flick is the main reason Hollywood's box office receipts are up 5 percent this season, points out The Early Show's entertainment contributor, Jess Cagle, in sizing up the summer so far for Hollywood's studios.  More...


    •  Did Cops Cover Up Mel Gibson Tirade?
    •  $1M Cross-Media Reality Show To Bow
    •  Road Trips With Kids, Without Gizmos
    •  Braids: 'In' For Women Of Any Age

     
    Legal News STORIES - July 28, 2006
        
       
    •  Bigger Hezbollah Rocket Goes Farther
    The Khaibar-1 landed outside Afula, about 30 miles south of the Lebanon border. Although it carried 220 pounds of explosives, no casualties were reported. Meanwhile, diplomatic moves toward a cease-fire were continuing.  More...


    •  Nightmare Murder In Big Apple
    •  New 9/11-Style Plot In The Works?
    •  Serial Killer: 'None Ever Got Away'
    •  Pagan Prisoner Executed In Va.

    • Section Front
    •  Police: 28 In Killer's Photos Alive
    Investigators who released decades-old pictures of about 50 women photographed by a murderer on death row said that they believe more than half the women are alive, but that three appear to be homicide victims.  More...


    •  Landis Denies Doping Charge
    •  Serial Killer: 'None Ever Got Away'
    •  Peace Corps Applications Soar
    •  Breast-Feeding Cover Sparks Debate

    • Section Front
    •  5,000 More U.S. Troops Baghdad-Bound?
    As many as 5,000 additional U.S. troops will be sent into Baghdad to stem escalating violence there, officials say. The plan has not been finalized, but would call into question whether the U.S. could reduce troop levels in Iraq by year's end.  More...


    •  Bigger Hezbollah Rocket Goes Farther
    •  Charles And Di: Doomed From Start?
    •  North Korea Says No To Nuke Talks
    •  Peace Corps Applications Soar

    • Section Front
    •  Cindy Sheehan Now Bush's Neighbor
    Anti-war mom Cindy Sheehan has purchased five acres of land near President Bush's Texas ranch with some of the insurance money she received after her son was killed in Iraq. Sheehan plans another anti-war protest at the ranch next month.  More...


    •  House Plans Vote On Minimum Wage
    •  Senator Apologizes To Firefighters
    •  Charles Barkley Eyes Run For Governor
    •  Bush Signs Child Predator Law
     

     
    Federal Judge Finds KPMG Employees Coerced, Suppresses Statement
    New York Law Journal

    Southern District of New York Judge Lewis A. Kaplan took another swipe Wednesday at the government's conduct in its prosecution of 16 former employees of accounting firm KPMG who allegedly developed illegal tax shelters for wealthy clients. Kaplan ruled that federal prosecutors coerced two ex-employees -- former Vice Chairman Richard Smith and ex-partner Mark Watson -- into giving statements at proffer sessions, and he refused to allow the government to use those statements at a trial scheduled for January.
     
       
     
     
    Threats Against Judges on Record Pace, Marshals Say
    The Associated Press

    Threats against federal judges are on a record-setting pace this year, nearly 18 months after the family of a federal judge was killed in Chicago. This year alone, the U.S. Marshals Service has had 822 reports of inappropriate communications and threats, a pace that would top 1,000 for the year. The rise in civil lawsuits, especially those filed by people who do not have lawyers, and a change in criminal cases in federal courts helps explain the rise, Marshals say.
     
       
     
     
    Employers Sued For Asking About Pot Use
    The National Law Journal

    Individual class actions have recently forced more than 100 companies in California to omit from job applications any questions about arrests on marijuana charges that didn't result in convictions, or questions about marijuana convictions that are more than two years old. The suits cited a 30-year-old state law that forbids employers from inquiring about arrest records or referrals to a drug diversion program. The suits seek injunctive relief and damages for violating the statute.
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         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.
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    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? ...
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    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 ...
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    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
  • U.S. Senator's bill would clear the way for Congress to sue Bush over bill-signing tactic
  • U.S. Senate set to pass parental notification requirement for minors seeking abortions    Top Legal Headlines - July 25, 2006-Findlaw
  •     
     
    •  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

     
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