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Pacman's image: Troubled cornerback turns humanitarian at food handout
ATLANTA AP - With the words "Feed The Children" written across his black T-shirt, NFL outcast Adam "Pacman" Jones stood outside the church doors, passing out almost 500 boxes of food and toiletries to the people who know him best."This is for you all - the community," he told an elderly woman, as a crowd of about 200 swarmed around him.Nebraska attorney general says state patrol can subpoena electronic records without judge
LINCOLN, Neb. AP - Investigators with the Nebraska State Patrol can compel a company to provide phone or e-mail records without a court order, the attorney general said Tuesday in an opinion.A service provider that was subpoenaed for records had questioned the patrol's authority to access the information without the approval of a judge or grand jury.Emerging Toyota defect evidence prompts new look at homicide cases
Robert Hilliard, a partner at Hilliard Mu�oz & Gonzales, talks to the National Law Journal about reopening the case against Koua Fong Lee and how the resulting victory may affect similar cases in at least three states.Real wages stagnant for public-interest attorneys, NALP says
The National Association for Law Placement has issued its latest round of sobering job news, and this time the depressing statistics focus on public-interest lawyer salaries.Mollison, petitioners-appellants v. United States, respondent-appellee
Purpose of IRS Summonses Legitimate Under �Powell� Even if Petitioners Bona Fide U.S. Virgin Islands ResidentsView more book results for the query "*"
How to Research Private Companies
When it comes to privately owned (or privately held) companies, sometimes a wealth of corporate information just isn't available. Research librarian Jocelyn Stilwell-Tong tells you where to look.Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital v. Cannon Design Inc.
Hospital's Professional Malpractice, Breach Claims Over Seismic Upgrade Go ForwardYale Defamation Lawsuit Becomes a Case of Mistaken Identity for Texas Attorney
A Texas attorney who has the same name as a defendant in an Internet libel suit that has drawn national media attention has asked an attorney for the plaintiffs to amend the complaint in that suit to clarify who the defendant actually is. Matthew C. Ryan made the request to Stanford Law professor Mark A. Lemley, attorney for two Yale Law School students who allege that a different Matthew C. Ryan made untrue sexually crude and derogatory remarks about them on an Internet discussion board.Good Legal Technology is Good Business: A Case for Bringing Employment Issues In-House
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