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May 31, 2013 |

LawJam 2013: From Street To Stage With Stovall

In trying to select a name for a previous band I drove past Stovall Street in Ormewood Park and thought that's a name for a band one day - maybe one that does country played by former punk rockers.
3 minute read
March 27, 2003 |

MENA v. KEY FOOD STORES CO-OPERATIVE, INC.

10 minute read
July 21, 1999 |

Hurtful Boasting?

Using the Lanham Act, Technical Chemicals and Products Inc., a Florida medical diagnostic products company, is challenging a competitor's claims about the competitor's own product. TCPI sued Miami medical products company Americare Health Scan Inc., saying Americare's claims over a special HIV detection test are overblown and hurting TCPI's business.
5 minute read
January 24, 2011 |

Legal Malpractice, Retaining and Charging Liens

Andrew Lavoott Bluestone writes that here is no subject closer to the hearts of attorneys, and no subject that engenders as much litigation, as the interplay of legal malpractice claims and attorney' fees.
10 minute read
July 19, 2011 |

Australian Firms Grab Lead Roles on Mining Deal

Australia is increasingly the place to be for large international and Am Law 200 law firms seeking new venues for deal work. On Monday, China's Hanlong Mining Investment made a $1.52 billion bid for Australian mining company Sundance Resources. Clayton Utz is advising Sundance; Mallesons Stephen Jaques is advising Hanlong.
3 minute read
March 11, 2010 |

Prosecutor Exhorts Senators to Derail Obama 2nd. Cir. Nominee

In 2005, U.S. District Judge Robert Chatigny warned a defense lawyer of dire consequences if the lawyer did not do more to try to delay the execution of his client. "I'll have your law license," Chatigny warned at one point, in a 55-minute conference call.
4 minute read
November 09, 2012 |

Landmark Settlement Rejects Medicare 'Improvement Standard'

In his Elder Law column, Daniel G. Fish of Daniel G. Fish, LLC writes that despite a history of successful challenges, it has been a long accepted article of Medicare faith that once a patient is no longer improving, coverage ceases, even if skilled care is necessary to maintain the patient's condition. A signed settlement agreement may soon fundamentally alter that practice of automatic denial.
5 minute read

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