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October 05, 2012 |

Capitol Report

An update on the action in Trenton.
5 minute read
October 29, 2007 |

Newsbriefs

6 minute read
Former Dodgers Owner's Ex Loses Bid to Undo Settlement
Publication Date: 2013-09-11
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Jamie McCourt had claimed that her 2011 divorce agreement with Frank McCourt should be dismantled because her ex-husband fraudulently portrayed the value of the Dodgers at below $300 million. He sold the team last year for $2.15 billion.

June 11, 1999 |

Black Employees Take Coke to Court

A U.S. District Court judge ordered Coca Cola Co. to deliver six years' worth of computerized data about thousands of workers to answer a disrcimination suit brought by more than 1,500 black employees. The company argues that the plaintiffs' claims are too individualized to be resolved in a class action.
4 minute read
October 10, 2012 |

IOLTA Clearance List 2011

Notice to the bar.
3 minute read
May 31, 1999 |

Wingtips take wing

Memorial Day was once the time for Brahmin lawyers to take their white summer shoes out of the closet, but come June 1, Bingham Dana L.L.P. associate Fiona Trevelyan will strap on some blue, low-heeled sandals.
8 minute read
December 13, 2011 |

Daily Decision Service Alert: Vol. 20, No. 239 - December 13, 2011

Daily decision alert.
10 minute read
October 15, 2008 |

Volatile Commodity Markets: Are Customers Protected?

Oren Buchanan Haker and Eva Marijke De Grauw of Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft write that in response to the rising commodities prices, legislators were scrambling to introduce new legislation targeting low margin lending requirements, which are often as low as 5 percent to 8 percent. One such proposal, Senate Bill 3183, from Senator Byron Dorgan, D.-N.D., sought to curb speculation by raising margins to 25 percent for energy traders that were not commercial producers or purchasers.
14 minute read
June 02, 1999 |

Sentence Guidelines Panel Stalled by Vacancies

After allowing the U.S. Sentencing Commission -- the 7-member body that writes federal sentencing guidelines -- to remain paralyzed with vacancies for nearly a year, the White House and key Congressional Republicans appear close to agreeing on candidates to replenish it. The commission has not had a four-member quorum since last summer. Meanwhile, federal legislation on child sexual abuse, telemarketing fraud and identity theft has gone without guidelines.
8 minute read

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