By Bill McConnell | September 19, 2007
Despite pleas by a Department of Justice official and two legal scholars to slow down, the Senate Judiciary Committee's top Republican is pushing for a quick vote on legislation that would limit fe
By Mary Pat Gallagher | September 26, 2006
When Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, CIGNA stepped in to cover losses by evacuated Texaco employees who had to leave personal possessions behind. That insurance policy is at the core of a suit
By Henry Gottlieb | March 2, 2006
Plaintiffs personal injury lawyers are making strong use of electronic visual aids to win the attention of drowsy jurors, and the defense bar and insurers are beginning to wake up, trial lawyers sa
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | December 13, 2005
A federal judge Monday morning declared a mistrial in the nation's first federal Vioxx trial after a Southern District of Texas jury was unable to decide on a verdict.U.S. District Jud
By Richard B. Friedman and Melanie J. Sacks | October 15, 2007
In many cases, litigators need to obtain critical information from former employees of a party. Such a need may arise in at least two ways. First, counsel may need to contact a former employee of h
By Justin Scheck | September 22, 2006
Don't blame Hewlett-Packard Chairman Patricia Dunn, her new lawyer said Wednesday, for the convulsions the company's board have suffered in the wake of its troubled investigation of boardroom leaks
By Justin Scheck | September 25, 2006
With the stock market in a lather over Hewlett-Packard's troubled leak investigations, HP CEO Mark Hurd tried on Friday to take control of the situation. But in doing so, he left unanswered key que
By Barry R. Temkin | July 9, 2009
Lawyers retained by insurance carriers to represent policyholders confront unique ethical issues. Although defense counsel is frequently retained and paid by the insurance carrier, the lawyer's
By Bradford E. Biegon | July 27, 2007
Are you facing a mountain of electronic discovery and wondering if you can get it into evidence? Take heart: A recent 101-page opinion out of Baltimore, issued in a case involving a small maritime
By Jonathan W. Fox | November 22, 2006
The University of Texas and former UT School of Law Dean William Powers Jr. -- now UT's president -- did not discriminate against an African-American law professor or retaliate against him for fili
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