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Court of Appeals to Hear Last Pending Death Case
Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown, the man bringing the last outstanding death penalty appeal to the Court of Appeals, embodies the state's ambivalent experience with capital punishment since its revival in 1995. Today in Albany, Mr. Brown's office will defend the statute and the death sentence that John Taylor received for the notorious killings of five workers at a Wendy's restaurant in Flushing. Yet, Mr. Brown is opposed to capital punishment as a costly and inefficient crime-fighting tool.Sometimes, editing can be a crime
The editing of a manuscript is illegal if it comes from Iran, no matter what the subject matter, a federal agency recently told an American organization that publishes scientific journals.View more book results for the query "*"
Battle Over Telecommunications Competition Lights Up Again
Battle Over Telecommunications Competition Lights Up AgainThe Public Utility Commission and the General Assembly will wrestle with two developments involving the telecommunications industry that will again focus attention on the sputtering ...Oppressed Minority Shareholders Should Be Afforded Protection
Since it is unclear whether the protections afforded by the Minority Oppression Statute are applicable to LLCs or will be extended to them by the Legislature, it is incumbent on practitioners representing minority members to protect the rights of their clients during the inception phase of the entity.No Arbitration for Injunctive Relief Claims
Consumer and business interests alike claimed victory Thursday when the California Supreme Court declared that claims for injunctive relief under unfair competition and false advertising statutes aren't subject to arbitration, but demands for monetary relief in such cases are.Watsco declares special dividend of $5
The board of heating and cooling company Watsco Inc. said its board declared a special cash dividend of $5, totaling about $172 million, and a regular quarterly cash dividend of 62 cents.'The Onion' Reads Alito's Mind
Sometimes even satirical newspapers get it right. Shortly following his confirmation to the U.S. Supreme Court, Justice Samuel Alito read a story in The Onion suggesting that he was annoying his new colleagues by going on about how much better things were run on his old home turf, the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. "It was very disorienting ... I hadn't said anything to anyone," he said. "But I had been thinking it."Revenue, Profit, Cash: Managing Law Firms for Success
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Law Firm Operational Considerations for the Corporate Transparency Act
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The Ultimate Guide to Remote Legal Work
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Practical Guidance Journal: Protecting Work Product in a Generative AI World
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