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Finnegan Henderson 'Bounced Back' From Tough 2010 with Revenue Boost in 2011

Updated 4:01 p.m. Reflecting increased intellectual property business in Washington, Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner earned $342 million in gross revenue in fiscal 2011, a 7.4% increase from 2010, according to our reporting. The firm also boasted a 9.2%...

Patton Boggs Partner a Finalist for Brooklyn Law School Dean

The chair of Patton Boggs? political and election law practice in Washington is one of three finalists vying to become the next dean of Brooklyn Law School. Patton Boggs partner Nicholas Allard is competing against dean of the University of...

Pay Freeze Lifted for Federal Courts

A freeze on promotions and pay increases among federal court employees is being lifted, according to an internal memorandum (PDF) distributed by the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. A better than expected appropriation from Congress for fiscal year 2012...

Hewlett-Packard Hires Akin Gump to Lobby on Information Technology Issues

Hewlett-Packard Co. has hired a law firm in Washington to lobby for it, paperwork filed with Congress this week shows. Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld is advocating on "[g]overnment information technology policy and acquisitions" for the Palo Alto, Calif.-based...

D.C. Judge Sides With Prosecutors In Document Dispute In Fraud Case

A federal judge in Washington has ordered a businessman charged in a stock price manipulation scheme to disclose documents that his defense lawyers claimed the attorney-client privilege protected. Chief Judge Royce Lamberth of U.S. District Court for the District of...

Farkas & Toikka's Roger Morrison

An affidavit to remember

In August 2009, boutique international law firm ShawnCoulson settled a $2.2 million fee dispute in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia with former client PowerTrain Inc. Late last year, the Mississippi-based engine parts importer moved to reopen the case, seeking sanctions for an allegedly false affidavit filed in the case.

Photo: Diego M. Radzinschi / NLJ

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Lerch, Early & Brewer's Robert Brewer, Jr. (R) and Arthur Lafionatis (L)

A winning formula

In recent years, Washington's top law offices have been hit hard by the recession. As a result, many have shed lawyers at an unprecedented pace. But that hasn't been the case for Lerch, Early & Brewer, the Bethesda, Md.-based firm that quickly but quietly has become the fourth-biggest law office in D.C.'s suburbs.

Pillsbury Winthrop's Michael McNamara

Howrey exiles fitting in with big-firm rivals

Survivors of the firm's collapse are breathing sighs of relief now that they've by large settled into other firms.

D.C. Councilman Phil Mendelson

Going after D.C.'s protestors

Earlier this month, two D.C. Council members introduced legislation to correct the disorderly conduct statute, adding language aimed at demonstrations.

FEATURED NEWS

Quinn Emanuel's Kathleen Sullivan

Will alien tort case be next Citizens United?

The next Citizens United, in the view of some of that decision's most vigorous critics, may have nothing to do with campaign finance or the First Amendment. Instead, corporations in a case the justices will hear this month seek not to spend their money but to avoid doing so by arguing that they have no liability under a 1789 statute for torts committed abroad in violation of international law or U.S. treaties.

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau head Richard Cordray

GOP senators berate new consumer financial protection chief over his recess appointment

For two hours, Republicans pounded home their objections to Cordray's Jan. 4 recess appointment by President Barack Obama while the Senate was in pro forma recess.

The two-handled AK-47 machine carried during the robbery of an Industrial Bank in Washington, D.C. in 2004.

Figuring out what a bank robber knows

For his use of the machine gun during a months long crime spree in 2004, Bryan Burwell received an additional 30 years behind bars. A provision in federal law sets out a mandatory 30-year term for any person who uses an automatic weapon during a robbery. But questions remain.

MOST POPULAR STORIES

  1. Intellectual Property: A Special Report
  2. Congress' unconstitutional pay freeze
  3. Howrey exiles fitting in with big-firm rivals
  4. A winning formula
  5. Police violated 4th Amendment with GPS tracking, Court rules
  6. E-Discovery: A question of costs
  7. Figuring out what a bank robber knows
  8. INADMISSIBLE
  9. Court trims California slaughterhouse law
  10. Mystery man

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Principal deputy assistant attorney general for the Office of Legal Policy at DOJ Spencer Overton

INADMISSIBLE

A high Overton ceiling; deja vu all over again for Holder; new lobbyist at the White House Project; DENSO and Yazaki on the hook; Lamberth the labyrinth guide; King & Spalding partner to run for West Virginia attorney general; and a writing award for an internal memo in this week's column.

 
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