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Condo Associations Battle Lenders as Foreclosures Mount
As bills mounted and revenue shrank, the board of Miami Beach's luxury Bentley Bay condo knew it had to take drastic action.Vaccine Cases Spark Interest -- and an Unusual Move by Plaintiffs
As attention to vaccine liability heats up, the U.S. Supreme Court is weighing whether to hear a Georgia case in which the state high court has said vaccine makers could be held liable for a boy's neurological problems. In an unusual turn, the Georgia plaintiffs have dropped their suit for now, meaning that a similar case from Pennsylvania could be the vehicle by which the nation's highest court decides the question.Community Housing Innovations Inc. v. McKee
Landlord's 'Post-Termination' Acceptance of Rent Vitiated the 30-Day Notice RequirementPillsbury Cuts Six; Four Others Poised to Leave
A group of Pillsbury Madison & Sutro employee benefits attorneys is poised to walk out of the firm. Jonathan Ocker and at least three additional partners in the employee benefits group are in the final rounds of negotiations with Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe. Meanwhile, management at Pillsbury has decided that at least six partners from their West Coast offices are no longer a good fit.View more book results for the query "*"
Robinson v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.
Insurer's Reliance on Neurologists' Reports In Denying LTD Benefits Reasonable, ProperTrial Pros Dispense Advice to Public Interest Lawyers
About a dozen American College of Trial Lawyers fellows put on an innovative CLE course this month at the University of Texas School of Law. The ACTL and Texas Lawyers Care sponsored the "Trial Skills for Public Interest Lawyers" course "to provide very high quality CLE on trial advocacy skills for public interest lawyers," says course director Terry Tottenham, a partner with Houston-based Fulbright & Jaworski.Pentagon Suspects Lawyer Involvement in Guantanamo Deaths
Pentagon officials and attorneys for the Guantanamo Bay detainees have always been at odds. "Our access to our clients makes it impossible for the military to control the narrative," says David Remes, a Covington & Burling partner who represents 17 detainees. When three prisoners committed suicide last month, the chasm grew even wider. Investigators seized 1,100 pounds of attorney-client-privilege material as part of a probe into whether outsiders, possibly lawyers, were involved in a larger suicide plot.State AI Legislation Is on the Move in 2024
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