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November 21, 2005 |

Bonus Smiles

Call it the year of the bonus. Cold cash muscles out the once-popular stock option. But there's a twist.
7 minute read
December 18, 2001 |

Runner-up: Rudolph W. Giuliani

Last fall, on winning a $15 million verdict against the city of Chicago in a police corruption civil rights case, litigator Philip S. Beck said, "It's not like I'm some kind of bleeding-heart liberal here who is a cause lawyer." Not that anyone was calling Beck a bleeding-heart liberal, given his other famous recent client: George W. Bush. Beck was the president-to-be's point man last year in the Florida election debacle.
6 minute read
December 12, 2011 |

IN BRIEF

A weekly roundup of Web-only stories from NLJ.com and other ALM publications.
4 minute read
March 25, 2002 |

Outside Counsel

T he New York Times began an article stating, "[i]f you`re going to confide in someone, who should it be: a doctor, a psychotherapist or a lawyer? This is not the beginning of a joke." 1 The article went on to discuss that the American Bar Association, in August 2001, approved a proposal to change the rules of confidentiality between lawyers and their clients.
14 minute read
August 20, 2013 |

Should Employers Consider Obesity a Disability?

In June 2013, the American Medical Association passed Resolution 420, which officially recognizes obesity as a "disease state with multiple pathophysiological aspects." Although the AMA opposes any effort to make obesity a disability under the law, there is no doubt that this recognition of obesity as a disease will have significant legal consequences.
6 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Health Care Fraud: Enforcement and Compliance Authors: James F. Barger, Jr., J. Elliott Walthall, Elise May Frohsin, Benjamin P. Bucy View this Book

View more book results for the query "US Department of Health and Human Services"

August 28, 2013 |

Should Employers Consider Obesity A Protected Disability?

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that more than one-third of adults in the United States are considered "obese."
6 minute read
July 28, 2004 |

People In The News

People In The News
3 minute read
July 17, 2002 |

Fulton Ends Reverse Bias Case, Pays Trio $3.5 Million

R. Robin [email protected] years after Fulton County lost a reverse discrimination case in federal court here, the county has paid three white former employees $3.5 million in damages. Atlanta attorney Edward D. Buckley III, a partner at Buckley Klein, said the county paid the judgment on June 30, less than three weeks after the U.
5 minute read
May 02, 2013 |

People in the News

Jerry Lehocky, president-elect of the Pennsylvania Association for Justice and of Pond Lehocky Stern Giordano, presented the PAJ's Murray S. Love Award to Temple University's Beasley School of Law students Caroline N.J. Power and James E. Price.
3 minute read
January 19, 2012 |

Adding third shifts at auto plants jump-starts local economies

Auto workers in the U.S. are benefiting from the return of a third shift at factories — often from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. — translating to 24-hour-a-day production at many plants for the first time since the industry collapse in 2009.
7 minute read

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