0 results for 'Eric Company'
Tall Order: J. Tullos Wells Scores as Outside General Counsel for San Antonio Spurs
J. Tullos Wells has scored some perks as outside general counsel for the San Antonio Spurs. Besides rubbing elbows with big-name athletes and celebrities, Wells' Spurs memorabilia includes two diamond-studded National Basketball Association championship rings, and he expects soon to add a third ring to his collection.Magazine Ordered to Reveal Its Sources
A federal judge in Alabama has ordered a Sports Illustrated writer to disclose confidential sources in a $20 million libel case where the key legal issue parallels one in the case of former Olympic Park security guard Richard Jewell. The case involves a 2003 story about former University of Alabama head football coach Michael D. Price. The publisher is seeking an interlocutory appeal before the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.View more book results for the query "Eric Company"
United States v. Lane Labs-USA, Inc. et al
The Government is entitled to a permanent injunction prohibiting defendants from marketing certain products (one made from shark cartilage, one from rice bran treated with Shiitake mushroom, and one from glycoalkaloid, which is an extract of sand brier) as treatments for cancer, skin cancer, and HIV/AIDS; defendants' claims go well beyond the structure-function claims permitted by 21 U.S.C. � 343(r)(6)(A) of the Dietary Health and Supplement Act of 1994.Firms Deal With Caseloads, Pay Policies for Attorneys Called to Active Duty
Ten days after Hayes and Boone partner Andrew Fono learned he was being called to active duty, he turned his environmental litigation docket over to his partners and packed up his office in Houston. It's a rare situation for a partner to be called to active duty, and the firm didn't have a policy to deal with the situation. Most firms will supplement attorneys' military pay, as Hayes and Boone will do for Fono -- but lawyers must still contend with re-entry issues at the end of service.New Ballgame For Claims of Idea Theft
Stephen Terrell isn't a copyright lawyer. But last month, he filed suit on behalf of four Californians who allege that Fox Broadcasting Co. stole their idea behind the hit reality television show, So You Think You Can Dance.United States, appellant v. John Canova, defendant-appellee
Fraud Conspiracy Action, Based on False Statements To Medicare Agents, Remanded for ResentencingTrending Stories
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