0 results for 'Fox News'
John Stamos Played Uncle Sleazy, Defense in Blackmail Case Argues
Attorneys for a couple accused of plotting to extort $680,000 from John Stamos are trying to get them off the hook by attacking the actor's character and the FBI's credibility.Jailhouse Rockers Denied Injunction
A public furor erupted when musical groups formed by Graterford prison inmates were featured on the television show Music Behind Bars on VH-1, and then-Gov. Mark Schweiker quickly vowed to silence the jailhouse rock.Has the Internet Killed the Video Star?
In 1981, MTV launched with the song, "Video Killed the Radio Star," staking claim to a new media. Ironically, MTV's parent, Viacom, now cries that the Internet has killed the video star, or at least it will unless a court enjoins YouTube.com. Attorneys Gerald C. Pia Jr. and Brian C. Roche believe that this dispute -- over copyrighted video posted on YouTube without Viacom's authorization -- raises the possibility that technology has made the Digital Millennium Copyright Act obsolete.Arrington: Booting whites not about race
One week after he cleared his courtroom of white people so he could have a "fireside chat" with the black defendants assembled before him, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Marvin S. Arrington Sr. offered an explanation and-for anyone offended by his act-an apology."There were no official acts" during the private lecture, he said, "just a frank chat.Applicability of 'Noseworthy' Doctrine: Issues and Their Resolution
In his Evidence column, Michael J. Hutter, a professor at Albany Law School and special counsel to Powers & Santola, analyzes developments regarding the 'Noseworthy' doctrine which eztablished a plaintiff in a wrongful death (personal representative of the decedent whose death was caused by defendant) or an amnesiac plaintiff in a personal injury action (amnesia caused by defendant) is ordinarily not held to this usual degree of proof.Newspaper Ordered To Pay Judge $2.1 Mil.
A jury Friday ordered the Boston Herald to pay $2.1 million for libeling a Superior Court judge, saying it misquoted him as telling lawyers that a 14-year-old rape victim should get over it.Wiretap Case Sent Back to State Court
A group of 370 union workers who claim they were subjected to illegal surveillance at a factory in Reading have won the right to pursue their wiretap and invasion of privacy claims in the Pennsylvania courts now that the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that the federal judge who dismissed their case never had jurisdiction.State AI Legislation Is on the Move in 2024
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