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April 17, 2001 |

Staying in the Groove

An uncompromising vision combining music and business has set Marcus Johnson on an independent course through law school, and on to the upper reaches of the Billboard magazine contemporary jazz charts. Johnson plays the keyboard, owns the record label and composes. "He's a remarkable example of someone who has integrated his legal knowledge with his purposes in life," said one of his law professors.
6 minute read
June 18, 2007 |

For Lawyer Giuliani, a Real Sweet Deal

How GOP presidential candidate Rudolph Giuliani has balanced his law firm ties with Bracewell & Giuliani and his campaign.
22 minute read
November 26, 2007 |

Court Revisits Performance of Attorneys

6 minute read
May 22, 2002 |

Class Action Suit Over Blood Warning Stumbles

A Chicago minister has hit a roadblock in his attempt to make the nation's hospitals and blood banks legally responsible for notifying blood transfusion patients they might be infected with hepatitis C. A judge in Cook County, Ill., dismissed the Rev. John David Sturman's class action, ruling that his claim that hospitals and blood banks have a duty to notify patients of a potential infection is "legally insufficient."
4 minute read
November 09, 2011 |

Wealthy qualifying for loans intended for low-income borrowers

Colorado's San Miguel County is known as a winter playground with world-class skiing and mountain vistas, a place where homes can sell for millions of dollars.
5 minute read
October 28, 2011 |

Proposed rule would unseal some grand jury records

For months, the U.S. Justice Department vigorously opposed the unsealing of former president Richard Nixon's 1975 testimony in the Watergate investigation, saying that disclosure would undermine the secrecy of grand jury proceedings.DOJ lawyers argued judges don't have the authority to craft exceptions to the federal criminal procedure rule that governs grand juries.
4 minute read
March 19, 2004 |

Florida Judge Complains that Prosecutor is Weak-Kneed

Sweating under the Feeney amendment, and with John Ashcroft watching their sentencing patterns, federal judges around the country are unhappy and on edge. Perhaps that's why U.S. District Judge K. Michael Moore called Miami U.S. Attorney Marcos Jimenez's office "weak-kneed" and lacking in "prosecutorial zeal" for allowing a recent deal with a "career criminal." Moore went on to note a sharp decline in the number of cases prosecuted by the U.S. attorney's office in Miami under Jimenez's leadership.
8 minute read
April 01, 2010 |

Environmental Law

Michael B. Gerrard, the Andrew Sabin Professor of Professional Practice and director of the Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School, and senior counsel to Arnold & Porter, writes that while climate change legislation is mired in Congress, several units in the Obama administration have been using their existing statutory authority to adopt rules or guidance requiring extensive disclosures about greenhouse gases in a wide variety of contexts.
11 minute read
November 07, 2006 |

Political Parties Field Attorney Volunteers

4 minute read

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