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May 12, 2000 |

Who Gets To Appoint ALJs?

Are more than 1,000 federal administrative law judges violating the U.S. Constitution? The U.S. Supreme Court soon may get the opportunity to tackle that fundamental question in a case challenging the appointment of administrative law judges by the Office of Thrift Supervision, a division of the U.S. Treasury Department.
5 minute read
February 11, 2010 |

Open Source Routers Are Worth Considering

Open source operating systems have successfully spread to various nooks and crannies of technology, powering servers all over the internet, including routers. Consultant Brett Burney looks at the benefits offered by an open source router, in addition to its usually lower cost.
6 minute read
November 19, 2012 |

Top Mobile Use Cases in Law Firms

"Bring your own device" programs, popularly known as BYOD, are taking the legal profession by storm. I've seen it firsthand at a number of legal technology conferences and gatherings, and the Am Law Tech Survey 2012, coming to the December 1 issue of Legal affiliate Law Technology News, finds legal professionals everywhere as either providing or supporting their mobile device use.
7 minute read
March 21, 2008 |

Software Promises No Longer a Pipe Dream

The benefits of new software to smaller law firms
6 minute read
November 14, 2012 |

Top Mobile Use Cases in Law Firms

As mobile devices and apps become more prevalent in law firms, and "Bring Your Own Device" programs proliferate, consultant Sean Martin asks "Who's running the show: the IT department or the lawyers?"
7 minute read
November 20, 2012 |

Top Mobile Use Cases in Law Firms

As mobile devices and applications become more prevalent in law firms, the question becomes "Who's running the show: the IT department or the lawyers?"
7 minute read
November 14, 2012 |

Top Mobile Use Cases in Law Firms

As mobile devices and apps become more prevalent in law firms, and "Bring Your Own Device" programs proliferate, consultant Sean Martin asks "Who's running the show: the IT department or the lawyers?"
7 minute read
January 05, 2000 |

A Thrift Stiffed?

For the longest and possibly most expensive enforcement case to result from the savings and loan crisis of the '80s, Houston businessman Charles Hurwitz is the perfect government target. Environmentalists claim Hurwitz, the CEO of MAXXAM Inc., which owns logging company Pacific Lumber, pillages forests. Now banking regulators are one of Hurwitz's biggest threats. They allege he is to blame for the fifth-largest thrift failure in the nation, which cost taxpayers $1.6 billion. They want him to pay for it.
9 minute read
March 01, 2008 |

Pipe Dream No More

By all accounts, software-as-a-service (SaaS) is taking the legal world by storm — and other recent developments, such as virtualization and open source software, are knocking at the door.
6 minute read
Wheeling Pittsburgh Steel Corp. v. Mitui and Co., Inc.
Publication Date: 2000-07-31
Practice Area: antitrust
Industry:
Court: 6th Cir.
Judge: KENNEDY, SILER, and BATCHELDER, Circuit Judges
Attorneys:
For plaintiff: Steven M. Schneebaum et al.
For defendant: Christopher Landau et al.
Case number: No. 99-3741

The full case caption appears at the end of this opinion. OPINION SILER, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff, Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp. ("Wheeling-Pittsburgh"), filed suit a

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