By Scott Graham | June 22, 2018
Sidestepping the presumption against extraterritoriality, Justice Clarence Thomas' 7-2 opinion OKs damages under narrow overseas inducement statute.
By Michael Booth | June 8, 2018
In an order made public June 8 and dated a week earlier, the court denied a petition for certification from the New Jersey chapter of the Sierra Club and other environmental groups seeking review of an Appellate Division ruling upholding the settlement.
By Ross Todd | May 24, 2018
Although U.S. District Judge William Alsup appeared to lean the way of the six oil companies defendants on the merits at a hearing Thursday, he said he'll hold off ruling until he clears up jurisdictional issues that five of them have raised.
By Samantha Joseph | May 2, 2018
Plaintiffs are asking the court to find gross negligence and breach of contract over FPL's monthly "storm surcharge."
By Scott Graham | April 24, 2018
But the justices suggest procedure might not cover patents issued before 2011 passage of America Invents Act.
By Amanda Bronstad | April 20, 2018
A plaintiffs team suing a pipeline operator over a 2015 oil spill off the coast of California scored a rare win when a federal judge granted certification of thousands of property owners. Of course, that success came on the third try.
By Scott Graham | April 16, 2018
Despite possibility of "chaos," presumption against extraterritorial application may give way to simple proximate cause test, justices suggest.
By Marcia Coyle | March 13, 2018
A U.S. Supreme Court capital case could expand the federal jurisdiction over crimes involving Indians in eastern Oklahoma, including Tulsa.
By Kristen Rasmussen | February 22, 2018
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit on Wednesday upheld a $92,000 verdict for an in-house lawyer at a public utility in Memphis, Tennessee, whose request to work from home for 10 weeks while on bed rest due to pregnancy complications was denied.
By Jenna Greene | February 1, 2018
Fat Leonard allegedly enticed Navy officers with money plus fancy dinners, hotel rooms and—to quote the indictment— “a rotating carousel of prostitutes.” Alas, the merry-go-round is metaphorical. But is this good legal writing or bad?
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