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NJ Senate OKs gay marriage bill in milestone vote
TRENTON, N.J. AP - New Jersey lawmakers gave their blessing to legalizing gay marriage for the first time Monday as the state Senate passed a bill that would allow nuptials for same-sex couples, despite Gov. Chris Christie's insistence that he will veto such legislation.The Senate's 24-16 vote sends the bill to the Assembly, which is expected to pass it on Thursday.In Down Economy, Midsized Firms Make Their Move
Coming soon to a major city near you: new branch offices launched by midsized law firms.White House Lawyers Girding for Leak Investigation
As the Justice Department probe into who disclosed the identity of a CIA officer proceeds, White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales and his 10-lawyer staff will be tasked with answering investigators' demands for documents and interviews. The lawyers involved will have to make decisions about what to hand over and what to shield -- sticky issues for an administration that has been unyielding on assertions of executive privilege.View more book results for the query "*"
M.V.B. Collision v. Allstate Insurance
Plaintiff Found to Have Had Legitimate Purpose in Acquiring AssignmentAndersen Defense Suggests Duncan Pressured to Testify
Defense attorney Russell "Rusty" Hardin Jr. is doing his best to portray former Arthur Andersen auditor David Duncan, the government's key witness in Andersen's obstruction of justice trial, as an innocent family man who was pressured to plead guilty to a crime and testify for the government. Hardin's cross-examination of Duncan is the key exchange in the 2-week-old trial in federal court in Houston.Fed says economy has slowed, but takes no new steps
The Federal Reserve said the U.S. economy is losing strength and repeated a pledge to take further steps to stimulate growth if the job market doesn't show sustained improvement.Parallel Investigations Continue to Pose Challenges
Just when it seemed the legal climate was growing more favorable to the subjects of parallel government investigations, the 9th Circuit has declared "not so fast." Defense counsel and their clients must continue to proceed with caution, says Chadbourne & Parke's Douglas Jensen.Trending Stories
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