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The Penn-State Shakedown: The NCAA Piles On
In the aftermath of revelations of Jerry Sandusky's predatory child molestations, the NCAA swiftly entered into a stunning agreement in which it extracted a $60 million fine from Penn State, imposed a ban on its football program from bowl games and post-season play for four years, a reduction in scholarships from 25 to 15 per year for four years, vacated all of the team's wins from 1998 to 2011, and put it on a five-year probationary period. News reports are unclear about the exact destination of the $60 million fine, but suggest that an endowment will be established to serve victims of child abuse.AT&T Sells Cell Towers To Crown Castle For $4.85 Billion
AT&T, the latest carrier to offload towers to independent operators, can now focus on growth areas or more profitable parts of the business.AT&T's Bid for T-Mobile Officially Dead
What would have been a landmark U.S. telecommunications merger finally succumbed to litigation and regulatory pressure as AT&T officially abandoned its $39 billion bid for T-Mobile USA.What Every Lawyer Should Know About the Economics of a Law Practice
Because law school education often doesn't address the business aspects of practicing law, many lawyers join firms with little understanding of how they operate and without a clue as to what it takes to make a practice successful and profitable. Consultant Melchior Morrione explains the issues of law firm economics facing large- and small-firm attorneys as well as how they can learn to work at their highest-ability level in order to deliver better value to clients and increased profitability to the firm.Patent Attorneys Bemoan Recent Federal Court Rulings
The latest decision on patent law from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit that limited business-methods patents was seen as the most minor of what some intellectual property attorneys call attacks on the nation's patent system.Soon-to-be-Released ABA Report Certain to Heighten Debate
In a move that could make the rivalry between law firms and the Big Five accounting giants even more ferocious, a closely watched ABA commission may recommend today that attorneys be allowed to share fees with nonlawyers. Geoffrey Hazard Jr., a University of Pennsylvania law professor and legal ethics expert who serves on the 10-member ABA commission, said the panel will propose eliminating the long-standing prohibition against fee sharing because it's no longer relevant to law practice.State AI Legislation Is on the Move in 2024
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2024 ESI Risk Management & Litigation Readiness Report
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Creating a Culture of Compliance
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A Buyer's Guide to Law Firm Software
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