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June 04, 1999 |

'Step-Plus-Function' Revisited -- At Last

The Federal Circuit has largely avoided interpreting step-plus-function claims under 35 U.S.C. 112, para. 6. But Judge Rader's concurring opinion in Seal-Flex Inc. v. Athletic Track & Court Constr., while technically dicta, sheds new light on where the Federal Circuit is headed.
9 minute read
April 23, 2009 |

Mutual Marine Office Inc. v. Transfercom Limited

Despite Predecessor's Existing Credit Letter, Firm Must Post Credit Letter to Satisfy Award
1 minute read
November 01, 2011 |

Ex-Staff Attorney Accuses Quinn Emanuel of Racial Bias

Kisshia Simmons-Grant, who is black, alleges that her supervisor, a managing staff attorney, routinely assigned more work to white staff attorneys than to her even though she was comparably qualified. The result, she alleges, was several periods during which she had no work and therefore no income.
3 minute read
August 27, 2009 |

Role of the Event Study in Loss Causation Analysis

Lawyers and courts increasingly focused on proper methodology for determining whether investor losses are caused by fraud
4 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Pennsylvania Causes of Action, 12th Edition Authors: GAETAN J. ALFANO, RONALD J. SHAFFER, JOSHUA C. COHAN View this Book

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December 01, 2010 |

The Churn

Lateral moves and promotions in the Am Law 200.
3 minute read
August 27, 2007 |

Susman Godfrey Sued Over Alleged Fraud, Conspiracy

The arbitration process is supposed to make short order of endless, messy litigation. But if Positive Software Solutions, et al. v. Susman Godfrey, et al. stands for anything, it's that a dispute can become endless and messy precisely because of arbitration.
7 minute read
October 24, 2012 |

Speed up voter ID misinformation case, ACLU says

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - Lawyers led by the American Civil Liberties Union want a state judge to speed up a case asking Gov. Tom Corbett's administration to clearly broadcast the message that voters don't have to show photo ID on Election Day.
1 minute read
September 14, 2007 |

Judge Approves $30M Settlement From Sprint in Class Action Over Fees

A federal judge has given preliminary approval for Sprint Nextel to pay $30 million to settle a class action suit alleging it overcharged in passing along a federally mandated phone service subsidy. Sprint's co-defendant, AT&T, is not included in the settlement and will continue to face litigation. Under the settlement, qualified business and residential customers would receive prepaid telephone calling cards worth a total of $25 million, and attorneys would get $4.99 million in fees and costs.
2 minute read
Ninth Circuit Again Rejects Universal's Copyright Suit Against Defunct Veoh
Publication Date: 2013-03-15
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Veoh may have failed to become a video-sharing rival to YouTube, but it's been more successful in defending itself against copyright infringement claims. On Thursday the Ninth Circuit dismissed—for the second time in two years—a pioneering copyright suit brought against Veoh by Universal Music Group.

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