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Man who gave money to failed Times Square bomber to be deported
A Pakistani man who gave money to the man behind the failed Times Square bombing last May has been sentenced to the 11 months he's already served and released to federal officials for deportation.All That DOMA Drama: Rainmaker Quits in a Huff, Will BigLaw Appellate Practice Rebound?
Pataki Links Drug Reform to Parole Limits
ALBANY -- Governor Pataki proposed a pair of modest measures to soften the impact of the Rockefeller drug laws on some non-violent offenders in exchange for ending parole for all first-time felons and arming prosecutors with an array of new powers. The Governor calls it is a fair, balanced approach. But sentencing reform advocates complained his plan does too little to redress "gross injustices" under the state's mandatory drug sentencing structure.Anti-Apartheid Hero Works to Protect His Name From Commercialization
Anti-apartheid hero. Icon of peace and racial reconciliation. Brand name? Nelson Mandela has deployed a team of lawyers to make sure the commercial label doesn't stick, going after opportunists, criminals -- and now even an old friend. The Nobel Peace Prize laureate's legal battle against his former attorney illustrates the complexities of protecting Mandela's name from commercial predators while allowing his fans to re-christen roads, squares, bridges, universities and shantytowns in his honor.View more book results for the query "White"
Robin Rosenbaum nominated for U.S. District Court
U.S. Magistrate Judge Robin Rosenbaum, a federal prosecutor for nearly 10 years, has been nominated by President Obama for a U.S. District Court seat.Former Associate Sues V&E Alleging Discrimination
Houston-based Vinson & Elkins is the defendant in a suit filed recently by one of its former associates, an African-American female attorney who alleges V&E engaged in unlawful employment practices that violated her civil rights.Post-Its and Paper Clips: How Low-Tech Prevailed in Patent Case
In a patent infringement case in federal court, Johnson & Johnson subsidiary Ethicon Endo-Surgery showed the jury a massive video screen filled with images of the device at issue -- a medical tool that removes tissue for biopsies. Worried that the oversized images would distort the jury's view of the device, attorney Jack Scarola constructed his own replica of the device using Post-it notes, paper clips and homegrown ingenuity. Call it low rent, but Scarola won $2 million for his client.Creating a Culture of Compliance
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A Buyer's Guide to Law Firm Software
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A Step-by-Step Flight Plan for Legal Teams: Fire Up Your Productivity Engine and Deliver High-Impact Work Faster
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Corporate Transparency Act Resource Kit
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