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December 12, 2008 |

CUNY Team's Central American Effort

A team of students from the City University of New York School of Law, working with feminist attorneys in Nicaragua, has brought pressure on the government of that Central American country to amend its total ban on abortions, including therapeutic abortions when the mother's life would be endangered by giving birth, which were allowed until 2006. The students and their attorney allies in Managua also call on the United Nations to intervene by forcing Nicaraguan authorities to end harassment of those in political opposition to government policy on abortion.
6 minute read
April 01, 2006 |

The IRS and the Avian Flu

Hypothetical case studies, with fictional managers and fictional businesses, which provide a way for executives to learn more about some of the situations they or their companies may face.
10 minute read
August 27, 2001 |

Federal Judge Rules Control Over Subsidiaries Keeps Latex Glovemaker in Suit

One of the leading defendants in massive tort litigation over latex gloves lost its bid to be dismissed from almost all cases against it. Philadelphia U.S. District Court Judge Edmund V. Ludwig -- who is presiding over pretrial proceedings in about 500 latex glove cases -- ruled that the court can exercise jurisdiction over Illinois-based Allegiance Corp. due to the control it exercises over its subsidiaries.
6 minute read
May 08, 2008 |

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS

New Additions Katharine Larsen has joined Levine Sullivan Koch & Schulz in the firm's Philadelphia office. Larsen is a graduate of the Georgetown University Law Center and previously worked for Clifford Chance in New York.
3 minute read
February 28, 2002 |

Jury Sees No Foul in Glove Brouhaha

Richmond [email protected] five-year, half-billion-dollar fight in federal court here between makers of latex surgical gloves has ended in a defense win for Regent Hospital Products Ltd."The jury went amazingly straight down the line for our client," says Paul, Hastings, Janofsky Walker partner William B.
5 minute read
September 10, 2009 |

Gossett v. Czech

5 minute read
December 11, 2012 |

Montco. Jury Clears Doctor in Medical Malpractice Case

A Montgomery County jury has handed down a defense verdict in favor of a Pennsylvania doctor alleged to have failed to diagnose the stomach condition that precipitated a woman's ailing abdominal health and contributed to her death.
4 minute read
June 17, 2009 |

Products Liability

Michael Hoenig, a member of Herzfeld & Rubin, writes that "reliability" of expert evidence must meet an admissibility or gatekeeping standard irrespective of whether novel scientific evidence is involved. He analyzes a number of cases where state appellate courts have reviewed trial court rulings involving trustworthiness of experts.
11 minute read
November 07, 2012 |

Mass. doctor-assisted suicide measure fails

A Massachusetts ballot question that would have legalized physician-assisted suicide for the terminally ill has been defeated by a narrow margin.
2 minute read

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