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May 27, 2010 |

Ministry says $80M-plus trust is mismanaged

When Margaret Simpson died in 2003, she left behind some $80 million to $110 million in land and other assets that are now at the center of a dispute pitting two trustees-one of them a lawyer-against In Touch Ministries Inc., the religious broadcasting organization founded by Charles F. Stanley, senior pastor of First Baptist Church of Atlanta.
9 minute read
R.O. v. Ithaca City School District, 09-1651-cv
Publication Date: 2011-05-23
Practice Area: Constitutional Law
Industry:
Court: U.S. Court of Appeals, Second Circuit
Judge: Before: Cabranes and Chin, C.JJ., Korman, D.J.*
Attorneys:
For plaintiff: RAYMOND M. SCHLATHER, Schlather, Stumbar, Parks & Salk LLP, Ithaca, NY, for plaintiffs-appellants. *1Joseph P. Esposito (Thomas C. Goodhue, Ian Conner, and Dennis Gucciardo, Hunton & Williams; Frank D. LoMonte and Michael C. Hiestand, Student Press Law Center, on the brief), Washington, D.C. and Arlington, VA, for amici curiae Student Law Press Center, Journalism Education Association, and National Scholastic Press Association, in support of plaintiffs-appellants.
For defendant: MARK J. LEMIRE, Lemire Johnson, LLC, Malta, NY, for defendants-appellees.
Case number: 09-1651-cv

Cite as: R.O. v. Ithaca City School District, 09-1651-cv, NYLJ 1202494606730, at *1 (2cir, Decided May 18, 2011)Before: Cabranes and Chin, C.JJ., Korman, D.J.*

July 13, 2005 |

Turning Point

Washington, D.C.'s Arnold & Porter hired its first African-American partner in 1969, and has since made diversity among its lawyers a priority. Its minority recruiting and affinity groups for women, lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transsexuals have helped maintain the Arnold & Porter's reputation as the capital's leading liberal firm. However, its percentage of minority partners could be higher -- and minorities have yet to break into the upper ranks of the firm's leadership.
15 minute read
May 31, 2001 |

Overby Leaves Butler Wooten; Wallace to Join Warshauer Firm

Seeking a more "laid-back approach" to practicing law, C. Frederick Overby is leaving Georgia's Butler, Wooten, Overby, Fryhofer, Daughtery & Sullivan -- the firm he helped found. Overby says he'll spend more time hunting, fishing and enjoying the outdoors. Also departing, the firm's only female partner, Lee Tarte Wallace, who starts Monday as a name partner with Atlanta's Warshauer Woodruff & Thomas.
4 minute read
November 09, 1999 |

What Lawyers Like: Mediation

Lawyers who champion alternative dispute resolution increasingly prefer mediation to arbitration, according to a survey of leading litigators and general counsel conducted by The National Law Journal and the American Arbitration Association (AAA). Overall, 69% of litigators and 88% of in-house counsel who responded to the survey say they prefer nonbinding mediation to binding arbitration. By contrast, only 25% of the litigators and 9% of the corporate counsel say they prefer arbitration.
8 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book United States Export Controls Authors: John R. Liebman, Roszel C. Thomsen II, James E. Bartlett III, John C. Pisa-Relli View this Book

View more book results for the query "Johnson Controls Inc"

May 17, 2002 |

Cheers, Jeers for Cleanup Program

When the Dallas Mavericks lost twice to the Sacramento Kings at the American Airlines Center during the NBA`s Western Conference semifinals, fans weren`t referring to a literal stench when griping about the stinking games. Keith Shuley, a partner and environmental expert in the Austin office of Dallas` Hughes & Luce, can attest to that.
8 minute read
January 25, 2006 |

Handberry, plaintiffs-appellees-cross-appellants v. Thompson, defendants-appellants-cross-appellees

Panel Vacates Provisions of Injunction Requiring City Education Services to Young Rikers Island Prisoners
46 minute read
July 06, 2007 |

Belot, petitioner-appellant v. Burge, respondent-appellee

No Error in Position That Habeas Applicant Should Have Filed Unpolished Petition Before Deadline Expired
15 minute read
May 08, 2001 |

Alabama Plaintiffs Get $40 Million in Suit Against Monsanto

Monsanto Co. will pay $40 million to resolve Owens v. Monsanto, a case involving 1,596 plaintiffs from Anniston, Ala., alleging the company's production of PCBs contaminated the area and caused health problems. The suit took five years to bring to resolution and marked the beginning of the end for a longstanding, close-knit African-American community, as residents sold their homes to Monsanto and moved away.
10 minute read
May 07, 2004 |

Davis v. Rodriguez

Court Vacates Judgment in Defendant's Favor on Unconstitutional False Arrest, Excessive Force
33 minute read

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