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August 04, 1999 |

MDPs: Collision or Harmony?

During the ABA's annual meeting in Georgia beginning this week, the group's Commission on Multidisciplinary Practice will present its recommendation about allowing lawyers and nonlegal professionals to form partnerships and split fees. If the commission has its way, lawyers may soon be able to form partnerships and split fees with everyone from economists to architects. But what about legal ethics, conflicts and business if Big Law and the Big Five accounting firms merged?
7 minute read
March 22, 2013 |

War of the Words: Pleaded vs. Pled

There is a bitter, friend-splitting debate raging among lawyers about whether to use "pleaded" or "pled." Both words get a lot of play in legal writing. We think that it's time for one usage to rule them all — but we disagree about which word to send to the dustbin. Chandler always uses "pled." Boone always uses "pleaded." The gloves are off.
3 minute read
July 22, 1999 |

Citing Politics, Thomspon Quits Southeastern Legal Foundation

Saying the fight over Atlanta's affirmative action program has become too political, the only black member of the Southeastern Legal Foundation's legal advisory board resigned Thursday. Larry D. Thompson, a former U.S. Attorney appointed by Ronald Reagan, became the third person to cut ties with the conservative legal foundation in two days. Two businessmen resigned from the group's board of trustees on Wednesday after the Georgia Black Chamber of Commerce targeted their companies for boycotts.
4 minute read
Federal Circuit Refines 'Induced Infringement' Theory to Revive Akamai and McKesson Suits
Publication Date: 2012-08-31
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In a 6-5 en banc decision handed down on Friday, the Federal Circuit revived two patent infringement cases—one brought by Akamai Technologies Inc. against Limelight Networks Inc., and another by McKesson Corp. against Epic Systems Corp. More significantly, the court refined the theory of "induced infringement," ruling that inducement applies even when the steps recited in the patented method were performed by multiple parties.

In Weird En Banc Ruling, Fifth Circuit Punts on Climate Change Class Action, Leaving Mess for Supreme Court
Publication Date: 2010-06-01
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After a three-judge appellate panel reinstated a property owner's class action alleging that oil and chemical companies contributed to Hurricane Katrina's ferocity, the Fifth Circuit granted the defendants' motion to rehear the case en banc. Then, because it couldn't muster enough judges to hear it, the appellate court dismissed the appeal.

April 02, 1999 |

11th Circuit Affirms Brits' Right to Sue U.S. Over Wreck

The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a $1.2 million judgment against the United States in a case brought by British soldiers. The decision in Whitley v. United States marks the first time foreign servicemen have successfully sued the U.S. military under the Federal Tort Claims Act and is seen as a further paring of the Feres doctrine.
5 minute read
February 01, 2007 |

PRO BONO SCORECARD 2007: Scoring the Firms

26 minute read
January 15, 2013 |

War of the words: pleaded vs. pled

Lawyers often get to debate some of the most pressing questions of our time: The limits of Congress's commerce power. The reach of the Due Process Clause. "Pleaded" versus "pled."
5 minute read
The Global Lawyer: The Rise and Rise of OFAC
Publication Date: 2012-07-09
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In a once-sleepy corner of the Treasury Department, regulation of overseas conduct is going strong. That's bad news for European banks, but good news for American foreign policy--and a handful of well-positioned firms that excel at both litigation and bank regulation.

July 12, 1999 |

Payne Testifies in Latest Fight to Open Last Olympic Records

Atlanta's chief Olympic organizer, Billy Payne, took the witness stand last week to defend his view that records of Atlanta's bid for the 1996 games are private. Payne, a founder and co-chair of the Georgia Amateur Athletics Foundation, insisted that the group exercised no governmental authority in its successful bid to bring the Olympics to Atlanta.
4 minute read

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