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May 21, 2013 |

What To Do When Your Case Is 'Removed' to Federal Court

Many New Jersey litigators practice primarily in the Superior Court and rarely choose to be in a federal district court. Sometimes, however, the choice is not theirs to make, and even seasoned state court litigators can get surprised when the case they filed gets removed to a federal district court.
9 minute read
September 12, 2005 |

Inadmissible

Short takes on lawyers, firms and judges.
4 minute read
October 23, 2009 |

Miami-Dade judges vocal over merged seniority list

A decision by Chief Circuit Judge Joel Brown determining preferences for judicial assignments has robes aflutter and e-mails a-flying in the county's courthouses.
6 minute read
April 24, 2009 |

BofA's Lewis still has shot at stardom

It's time to kill off the notion of the Imperial CEO-and Ken Lewis is just the man for the job. The Bank of America Corp. chief executive officer should accede to demands to give up his additional role as chairman of the bank's board when shareholders meet later this month. Doing so would possibly help usher in a new era of corporate accountability and spur other executives to loosen their grip on power.
4 minute read
October 16, 2012 |

SEPTA Spared Subrogation Lien by Pa. Supreme Court

SEPTA does not have to pay back the workers' compensation of a woman who was injured on one of its buses in the course of her employment after the woman settled a tort claim with the public transit giant, the state Supreme Court has ruled, because of SEPTA's sovereign immunity powers.
5 minute read
June 13, 2012 |

Four Reasons Why the Revolution Petered Out

Business of law remained stable after the meltdown because of financial, managerial, psychological, tech factors.
7 minute read
September 06, 2007 |

The Policies and Politics of Antitrust

Almost 30 years ago Robert Bork, in his seminal book "The Antitrust Paradox: A Policy at War With Itself," wrote that: "modern antitrust law has so decayed that the policy is no longer intellectually respectable. Some of it is no longer respectable as law; more of it is not respectable as economics; ... a great deal of antitrust is not even respectable as politics." Fast forward from 1978 to 2007 and do we find all has become "respectable"? No and yes, says attorney and law professor C. Evan Stewart.
13 minute read
August 13, 2012 |

What pessimism? Chicago embraces the future

What's in store for the practice of law in the Midwest during 2012? We invited the people running four of the largest law offices in Chicago to provide their forecasts during a panel discussion in April.
35 minute read
September 12, 2011 |

Survey: Tech-Savvy Associates Want It All, and Some Firms Oblige

After years of barely registering a pulse on The American Lawyer annual associate technology survey, New York's Proskauer Rose jumped 47 spots in this year's rankings to land in twenty-sixth place. What happened? The firm attributes the spike to its new technology program.
5 minute read

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