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June 04, 2007 |

Next Up in Senate Probe

Bradley Schlozman, a former senior political official in the DOJ's Civil Rights Division, will testify Tuesday before the Senate Judiciary Committee. He's expected to be asked about his controversial attorney hiring practices.
7 minute read
May 09, 2005 |

Sharp Rise In Big Suits Against Firms

It's getting more expensive for corporate lawyers to defend themselves in malpractice cases. A soon-to-be-released study by the American Bar Association shows that the number of big-ticket malpractice suits � those with claims of $2 million or more � has risen dramatically since 1996.
7 minute read
January 21, 2004 |

Pennie Found to Have Violated Ethics Rules

A Manhattan judge has ruled that recently closed intellectual property law firm Pennie & Edmonds violated state disciplinary rules when it represented clients who later became adverse parties in patent litigation. Justice Charles E. Ramos said he would refer the matter to the Departmental Disciplinary Committee. The committee can recommend punishments, including disbarment for the attorneys in question.
3 minute read
May 21, 2004 |

Full 11th Circuit Will Hear Satan Worshipper's Arson Case

After 16 months, federal prosecutors finally got what they wanted: a second chance. The full 11th Circuit last week agreed to rehear a case in which a split panel tossed the arson convictions of a Satan worshipper who set fire to five Georgia churches during the 1998 Christmas and New Year's holidays. The case is the next move in a long debate -- stemming from a U.S. Supreme Court decision -- over Congress' power to regulate interstate commerce.
4 minute read
October 14, 2005 |

Silicosis Ruling Leaves Plaintiffs Bar Reeling

The so-called phantom epidemic of silicosis has become a hot potato for the plaintiffs bar.
3 minute read
February 03, 2010 |

'Law of Nature' or 'Invention'? Court Mulls Patentability of Genes

Before a standing-room only courtroom, a New York federal judge heard arguments Tuesday in a lawsuit questioning the patentability of human genes. The dispute centers on whether genes, once separated from the lengthy DNA sequence, are sufficiently "new and useful" to be deemed patentable under federal patent law. Multiple amicus briefs were filed on behalf of both sides of the case, which has become a lightning rod for the issue of genetic patenting.
5 minute read
October 12, 2009 |

Hogan, Lovells Union Faces Many Obstacles

Hogan & Hartson and Lovells are considering one of the riskiest maneuvers in the legal business -- a trans-Atlantic merger, which in this case would create a global megafirm of more than 2,500 lawyers. "If the integration is done right, this thing could really sing," said Altman Weil consultant Thomas Clay. That's the good news. The tougher questions are ones that partners on both sides are likely struggling with. Can they overcome the client conflicts that plague massive firms and seem to cap growth?
10 minute read
March 06, 2006 |

Supreme Court Lawyer Goldstein to Join Akin Gump

Thomas Goldstein, who rocked the rarified world of Supreme Court advocacy with his aggressive pursuit of cases, will join powerhouse law firm Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld as a partner May 1. Goldstein, 35, has argued 16 cases before the Court and also launched the widely read SCOTUSblog. He currently runs his three-member firm from his house with wife Amy Howe. Goldstein's hire instantly raises 900-lawyer Akin Gump's profile in the increasingly prized Supreme Court practice area.
4 minute read
Apple and Sextet of Tech Firms Lose Dismissal Bid in Employee Antitrust Class Action
Publication Date: 2012-04-19
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You don't often hear complaints about working for Apple, Google, Intel, Lucasfilm, Adobe, Intuit, or Pixar. But according to plaintiffs lawyers at Lieff Cabraser, Berger & Montague, and Grant & Eisenhofer, employees at the companies were the victims of a conspiracy to suppress their salaries and keep them tied down at their jobs. And on Wednesday, a judge in San Jose ruled that the lawyers had come up with enough evidence to allow their case to move forward.

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