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11th Circuit Rules Cop Can Be Sued for Excessive Force
“This case presents the question whether a police officer is entitled to qualified immunity when he intentionally applies unnecessarily tight handcuffs to an arrestee who is neither resisting arrest nor attempting to flee, thereby causing serious and permanent injuries,” Judge Stanley Marcus said.Retired DBR Vice President Sookie Williams Dies at 101
A consummate legal insider, Williams served as a liaison to the judiciary, court administrators and bar associations.Music Lawyer Monika Tashman Joins Manatt as Partner
And other announcements of recent hirings and promotions of New York attorneys.Strategic Payoff: Carlton Fields Sees Double-Digit Growth in Partner Profits
Gross revenues saw a smaller increase of 4.4 percentCarlton Fields Sees Double-Digit Growth in Partner Profits
Gross revenues saw a smaller increase of 4.4 percentView more book results for the query "*"
Florida's Chief Justice Addresses Incivility in the Legal Profession
Chief Justice Charles T. Canady spoke to South Florida attorney and judges Wednesday about the importance of professionalism.NY Legislature Moves to Add Funding for Foreclosure Legal Service Providers
Both the Assembly and the Senate included the requested $20 million for those organizations in their individual state budget proposals this week, signaling their support for the funding after it was left out of Gov. Andrew Cuomo's executive budget plan in January.Border Wall Won't Block International Reach of Bankruptcy Avoidance Powers
Bernie Madoff's Ponzi scheme and its unraveling is arguably one of the greatest personal tragedies in the history of American financial markets—lives were ruined as Madoff lost his investors roughly $18 billion, according to estimates from the Securities Investor Protection Corp.Supreme Court Reaffirms Prior Registration Requirement for Infringement Actions
Copyright Law columnists Robert J. Bernstein and Robert W. Clarida discuss 'Fourth Estate Public Benefit v. Wall-Street.com, et al.', one of two recent, unanimous Supreme Court opinions construing provisions of the Copyright Act relating to procedural requirements for commencing infringement actions and interpreting the term “full costs” in awarding them to the prevailing party.Dozens of Class Actions Build on Supreme Court's 'Janus' Union Ruling
Three new petitions at the U.S. Supreme Court are tied to the justices' ruling last term against mandatory public-sector union fees.