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November 03, 2009 |

Opposing Parties in Agreement on Pot Case Before Calif. Supreme Court

Students will get to see something rare when the California Supreme Court holds oral arguments on the UC Berkeley campus Tuesday: a case in which the opposing parties pretty much agree on the issues. Law professor Gerald Uelmen, for the defendant, and Deputy Attorney General Michael Johnsen, for the state, agree that legislators didn't have the power to amend Proposition 215 -- the 1996 ballot measure that OK'd medical marijuana -- to set limits on the amount of pot "qualified patients" could possess.
4 minute read
September 15, 2005 |

Suit Seeks Return of 'Excessive' Fees

6 minute read
March 03, 2008 |

People v. Roy Gray

Confession 'Sufficiently Attentuated' From Statement Before 'Miranda' Rights Waiver Was Suppressed in Error
1 minute read
September 28, 2007 |

Flawed Restatement

The American Law Institute should put to rest its project to create black-letter rules to clarify and adapt the common law to contemporary social conditions.
4 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Pennsylvania Causes of Action, 12th Edition Authors: GAETAN J. ALFANO, RONALD J. SHAFFER, JOSHUA C. COHAN View this Book

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February 24, 2009 |

Madoff judge denies motion on claim deadline

NEW YORK AP - A bankruptcy judge in the Bernard Madoff case refused Tuesday to waive a deadline for claims against the disgraced money manager by people who may be asked to give back money they made investing with Madoff.At a hearing in lower Manhattan, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Burton Lifland said he saw no need to clarify an earlier order approving the July 2, 2009 deadline.
3 minute read
April 06, 2012 |

Redwood Software v. Urbanik

Former Employee Need Not Submit Personal Electronic Devices for Forensic Evaluation
1 minute read
May 02, 2007 |

Use Forum Non Conveniens to Avoid Inconvenient Foreign-Plaintiff Litigation

More foreign nationals are coming to America, not as refugees, but as plaintiffs in complex litigation matters. These plaintiffs, often trying to circumvent less favorable foreign law, sue domestic U.S. corporations for alleged injuries caused abroad by international subsidiaries. Attorneys Stephen C. Matthews, Eric L. Probst and George Benaur discuss the forum non conveniens doctrine as a viable defense, and describe how the defense fared in recent cases involving Merck and Parmalat.
8 minute read
June 12, 2012 |

It's Never Too Early to Start Protecting Trade Secrets and IP

The best time for any company to formally define trade secret and intellectual property parameters is when an employee first walks through the door, not when they're headed for the exit.
4 minute read
April 22, 2003 |

GIAR v. GENTEA, A DIVISION OF KBC BANK, NV

6 minute read

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