0 results for 'US Department of Justice'
NYC Bar Groups Sue Over Plan to Eliminate Private Lawyers From Representing the Poor
Two Years Later, Witness Intimidation Case Against Attorney Dropped
The two-year legal odyssey of Arienne Irving, the New York defense attorney who faced life in prison for her alleged role in a violent plot to intimidate witnesses on behalf of a Guyanese drug kingpin, is officially over. Without giving an explanation, the Eastern District U.S. Attorney's Office withdrew its appeal Monday of Judge John Gleeson's decision to throw out a jury verdict convicting Irving of six felonies. Irving's co-defendant and former boss, Robert Simels, is serving a 14-year sentence in a federal prison.Broken-Nosed Fan Assumed Injury Risk During Pregame Warm-Up, N.Y. Judge Finds
Every baseball fan -- or at least every attorney who follows baseball -- knows that under the doctrine of assumption of the risk a team is not liable for fans injured by, say, foul balls or broken bats. Now, in a suit filed by a New York fan whose nose was fractured by a bat during a Brooklyn Cyclones pregame, a New York judge has ruled that the doctrine also extends to a bat "propelled" by a player either "warming up" or "horsing around."View more book results for the query "US Department of Justice"
Telecom Merger Conditions Cause Stir
Telecommunications attorneys are buzzing about the conditions that the Federal Communications Commission's staff proposed June 29 regarding the merger of regional phone companies SBC Communications and Ameritech. The merger conditions, which must be approved by the full Commission, are the most far-reaching and potentially expensive of any imposed on merging phone companies. If the conditions are approved, some telecom attorneys worry that it will be even more difficult to get mergers through the FCC.Three Keys to Immigration Law Compliance: Verify, Reverify, Retain
Recent events demonstrate that the government is increasing its policing of employment violations under immigration laws. What's more, the federal government's policy appears to be shifting away from imposing merely administrative penalties toward more onerous criminal prosecutions. Whether in the civil or criminal context, the renewed enforcement focus requires that employers and their attorneys remain mindful of compliance procedures, such as those discussed here.Trending Stories
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