Search Results

0 results for 'General Motors'

You can use to get even better search results
March 22, 2011 |

Kasten v. Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics Corp.

The antiretaliation provision of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 applies to oral and well as written complaints.
5 minute read
March 21, 2005 |

State v. Clarksburg Inn

The municipality's anti-noise ordinance, that prohibited "any loud, unnecessary or unusual noise . . . likely to annoy, disturb, [or] injure" the "health, peace or safety of others," is neither vague nor overbroad since it reasonably notifies the public of the conduct it proscribes; the Law Division judge properly balanced defendant's right to conduct its business against its neighbors' right to be free from excessive noise; defendant's conviction was based on substantial credible evidence and is affirmed.
12 minute read
January 14, 2011 |

CLE Listings

New Jersey continuing legal education listings.
3 minute read
April 19, 2013 |

Flawed Mistrial Declaration Dooms Retrial Bid, Panel Says

A judge's faulty mistrial declaration has resulted in barring on double jeopardy grounds Queens prosecutors from retrying a defendant on weapons charges, the Second Department has ruled.
4 minute read
August 08, 2008 |

Guantanamo Jury Gives Bin Laden's Driver 5 1/2 Years

A U.S. military jury gave Osama bin Laden's driver a surprisingly light sentence on Thursday, making him eligible for release in just five months despite the prosecutors' request for at least a 30-year sentence to deter would-be terrorists. Salim Hamdan's sentence goes for mandatory review to a Pentagon official who can shorten the sentence but not extend it. Hamdan thanked the jurors for the sentence and repeated his apology for having served bin Laden.
5 minute read
May 01, 2004 |

Breaking The [Bar] Code

Ven by the exacting standards of Las Vegas, where he lives part of the year, Gerald Hosier has enjoyed an amazing 14-year run. Representing a controversial inventor named Jerome Lemelson, Hosier has parlayed his client's patents on bar code and related technology into more than $1 billion in licensing fees. The lawyer had a simple strategy-betting that corporate defendants would rather pay up than risk the wrath of a jury-and a taste for raising the stakes. Six years ago Hosier made a bet he may live to reg
9 minute read
April 06, 2010 |

Lane v. Potter, PICS Case No. 10-1515 (E.D. Pa. Mar. 17, 2010). Buckwalter, S.J. (20 pages).

In this dispute focusing on the African-American plaintiff's unsuccessful bid for a promotion with his employer, defendant U.S. Postal Service (USPS), the court denied defendant's motion for summary judgment on plaintiff's Title VII claim.
5 minute read
May 01, 2002 |

Will Europe Have a Unified Tax System?

ELGIUM tries to woo companies by offering them massive tax breaks to establish their headquarters within the country`s borders. Ireland temporarily lowered its corporate income tax rates to lure foreign manufacturing businesses and banks to its shores. Luxembourg and the Netherlands offer their own unique sweetheart deals to multinationals.
8 minute read

Resources

  • Unlocking the Power of Early Case Assessment Workflows

    Brought to you by Integreon

    Download Now

  • Good Legal Technology is Good Business: A Case for Bringing Employment Issues In-House

    Brought to you by LexisNexis®

    Download Now

  • Insights and Strategies for Effective Succession Planning in AM Law 100 Firms

    Brought to you by Gallagher

    Download Now

  • State AI Legislation Is on the Move in 2024

    Brought to you by LexisNexis®

    Download Now

NEXT