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April 30, 2007 | Inside Counsel

Genetic Future

Congress is poised to outlaw discrimination based on genetic information.
6 minute read
March 12, 2009 |

Lawyers for Stanford exec object to search of her home

Accused Stanford Financial Group executive Laura Pendergest-Holt's attorneys from Lynn Tillotson Pinker & Cox in Dallas and Parsons Behle & Latimer in Salt Lake City filed a motion Tuesday accusing attorneys working with the court-appointed receiver in the Stanford fraud case of disregarding legal rules -- and general politeness -- in searching Pendergest-Holt's home and personal items last week. Pendergest-Holt is the only Stanford executive facing criminal charges.
3 minute read
January 11, 2012 |

Federal Circuit upholds preliminary injunction in case over frozen liver cells

A recent split decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit illustrates the divisions in the court over the standards for preliminary injunctions as well as for patent invalidity based on obviousness.
5 minute read
May 30, 2011 |

MOVERS

Elisa�beth Blattner-Thompson joins Ballard Spahr's labor and employment group as partner in the Salt Lake City office. Plus, more law firm moves in this week's column.
3 minute read
September 23, 2010 |

Former Hinshaw Partner Implicated in Fraud Scheme

The Securities and Exchange Commission has charged Todd Duckson, a former capital markets partner at Hinshaw & Culbertson and current CEO of Minneapolis-based specialty finance company True North Finance, with defrauding several hundred investors in a real estate lending fund. The SEC's complaint accuses Duckson and two executives of the Capital Solutions Monthly Income Fund of concealing from investors that the fund had no significant income because of the financial collapse of its sole business partner.
3 minute read
October 17, 2002 |

Intel Loses a Second Patent Fight With Intergraph Corp.

Intel Corp. lost its second patent battle against Intergraph Corp. last week when a Texas federal court ruled that Intel's Itanium microprocessors infringe two Intergraph patents. But the stakes weren't as high as they were in the previous dispute. That's because attorneys hammered out an unusual settlement in the first case that limited the damage award to $150 million in the second case, with an additional $100 million tacked on if Intel loses an appeal.
3 minute read
July 07, 2003 |

Civil Actions

4 minute read

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