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Lazar pleads guilty to three counts
Seymour Lazar, the first person to be charged in the government's criminal case against Milberg Weiss, agreed to plead guilty on Thursday morning to three charges. Lazar agreed to plead guilty to one count of filing false tax returns and one count of obstruction of justice. He also admitted he made false statements in court and agreed to forfeit about $1.5 million in alleged kickbacks.Is Open Source the Beginning, or the End, of the Software Revolution?
E-commerce involves not only the buying and selling of goods over the Internet, but is also a process of business communication through the application of technology to the automation of business transactions. And there is no greater debate regarding the flow of electronic commerce than that between the new open source paradigm, and the historic model of development of proprietary software within an enterprise.Criminal Charges: The Next Frontier for Libel Tourism
Joel Cohen and Katherine A. Helm examine the potentially perilous terrain of libel tourism, focusing on a New York professor of international law who wound up being prosecuted in France on criminal charges stemming from an unflattering book review.View more book results for the query "*"
When Life Was Simple, Blackberries Were Fruit
My friend J, who is almost a second-year associate at a neighboring firm, just emailed me the exciting news. He received his Blackberry.O.J. Simpson named a suspect in break-in involving sports memorabilia at Las Vegas casino
LAS VEGAS AP _ Investigators questioned O.J. Simpson and named him a suspect Friday in a break-in at a casino hotel room involving sports memorabilia.The break-in was reported at the Palace Station casino late Thursday night, police spokesman Jose Montoya said. He said investigators determined the break-in involved sports collectibles.Inadmissible: Thwarted Plot Adds to DOJ's Impatience; Jessica Cutler Has a New Attorney; and More
Employer's Promise of an IPO Not Enforceable
An employer won summary judgment in a breach of contract suit brought by a former employee who claimed she was promised salary increases once the company issued an initial public offering of stock. Tying contractual obligations to the occurrence of a potential -- but not inevitable -- event created an agreement that was "not sufficiently detailed or definite" to be binding, a New York judge ruled.Trending Stories
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