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Rogers A Tough-Minded Jurist With Panache
When Gov. M. Jodi Rell nominated Appellate Court rookie Judge Chase T. Rogers to become the next chief justice of Connecticut's Supreme Court, Rogers said it was "both humbling and exciting" to have Rell's confidence in her leadership at "a time of great transition" in the Judicial Branch.Blame-Pedestrian Defense Leads To $153K Verdict
ibPhillip Torres v. Angel L. Torres: /b/iA former McDonald's employee who was hit by a pickup and seriously injured while crossing a dark road in Fairfield was awarded more than $150,000 after a four-day trial. Bridgeport resident Phillip Torres, 19, was struck by a 1999 Ford Ranger truck just before 10 p.m. on March 31, 2007. He was leaving work at the McDonald's in Fairfield, between the Post Road and the King's Highway Cutoff.Judge Dismayed By DCF 'Deception'
In a case involving an emotionally troubled 12-year-old boy, the state Department of Children and Families is facing severe scorn from a veteran member of the Superior Court bench. Judge Francis J. Foley III contends the agency was insensitive to the boy's deaf father and slanted its findings to support its legal efforts to have the father stripped of his parental rights.Another Big Hitter Leaves The Bench
Middletown Superior Court Judge Robert Holzberg, whose negotiating skills helped settle dozens of lawsuits stemming from the Kleen Energy gas explosion and the St. Francis Hospital child sex abuse scandal, is resigning from the bench to become a partner and mediator at Pullman & Comley's Hartford office.Ex-Prosecutor Shows Very Little Discretion
Allison Leotta, who resigned in June 2011 from her government job to write full time, talked to the National Law Journal, which shares a corporate parent with the Connecticut Law Tribune, about the inspiration behind her novels and the blog in which she critiques crime shows. Her remarks have been edited for length and clarity.View more book results for the query "*"
Supremes Load Up On Employment Cases
Besides adding such high-profile issues as the constitutionality of lethal injection executions and voter ID laws to its docket, the U.S. Supreme Court ensured, through its latest grants of review, what is likely to be a "banner" year for labor and employment law.Helping Big Businesses Give Away Big Bucks
So you walk into a Starbucks and see details of a promotion that says for every cup of coffee you purchase, the chain will donate five cents to a particular charity. These charitable endeavors — called commercial co-ventures — have become big business. That's where Robert Laplaca, of Levett Rockwood in Westport, comes in.Corporate Transparency Act Resource Kit
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Your Long-Term Care Legislation Playbook
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