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December 15, 2005 |

Judge Invokes 1894 Law in Cat Custody Dispute

The outcome of a yearlong custody battle over a lost cat -- initiated by the cat's original owner against an animal-rescue agency and, subsequently, the cat's new owner -- will hinge on the requirements of the 1894 New York City Dog License Law, a Manhattan judge has ruled. Under the law, "a person claiming a dog or cat which was lawfully seized is entitled to resume possession only if the animal is claimed within 48 hours of the time it was seized," the judge wrote.
3 minute read
June 25, 2008 |

Newsbriefs

5 minute read
July 12, 2004 |

Adelphia Founder, Son Guilty of 18 Fraud Counts

Adelphia Communications Corp. founder John J. Rigas and his son Timothy J. Rigas were convicted of securities fraud and bank fraud for the multibillion-dollar scandal that landed their company in bankruptcy.
6 minute read
December 23, 2005 |

Accolades

Attorneys at more than 30 law firms were honored at the Legal Aid Society's 2005 Pro Bono Awards dinner Dec. 1, hosted this year by Shearman & Sterling.
3 minute read
August 14, 2006 |

In re Cendant Corporation Securities Litigation

Lengthy recitation of facts and procedural history prevents an order from serving as a separate document within the meaning of Rule 58.
5 minute read
May 26, 2006 |

Woody Allen Loses Battle Over Editing of Six Films for TV

Woody Allen claims he never watches his own films, as he would only notice what he could have done better. Now the director is probably even less likely to watch the versions edited for TV by his former producer and current legal adversary, Jean Doumanian. Manhattan Supreme Court Justice Bernard J. Fried ruled that under the terms of a 2003 settlement agreement, Doumanian may develop television-and-airplane versions of six of Allen's films. Allen argued that he would lose artistic integrity.
4 minute read
October 24, 2002 |

Catching The Elusive CEO

4 minute read
July 15, 2002 |

Throwing CEOs in Jail No Easy Job

Putting CEOs behind bars is not as easy as Bush and the Justice Department would make it seem.
8 minute read
January 04, 2010 |

Movers

George Jordan III of Fulbright & Jaworski has been elected to the board of directors of the American Intellectual Property Law Education Foundation. Plus more law firm movers in this week's column.
3 minute read

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