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November 29, 2004 |

Alien detentions on high court docket

Depending on the circumstances, certain noncitizens are allowed to enter the United States without obtaining a definitive status. If these individuals act criminally, the system experiences difficulty in determining their sentences and possible deportation.
7 minute read
August 15, 2007 |

Immigration Law

Ted Chiappari, a partner at Satterlee Stephens Burke & Burke, and Stephen Yale-Loehr, of counsel at Miller Mayer, write that a federal district court ruled late last month that federal immigration laws pre-empted a Pennsylvania city (and by implication, other cities and states) from passing laws directly regulating the employment and housing of foreign nationals working and living there.
8 minute read
June 27, 2005 |

Immigration Law

Stanley Mailman, of counsel to Satterlee Stephens Burke & Burke, and Stephen Yale-Loehr, of counsel at True, Walsh & Miller, write that all legislation has winners and losers. From the perspective of most immigrant, civil liberties, and bar groups, the REAL ID Act of 2005 is a real disaster.
8 minute read
March 26, 2012 |

State Open Records Law Trumps Locality's 'Confidentiality' Rule

Westchester County Supreme Court Justice James W. Hubert ruled that While Plains and its local ethics board cannot withhold some documents sought by The Journal News based on a local law that declares that the "complaints, records and other proceedings" of ethics investigations prior to the filing or dismissal of complaints are "deemed confidential."
4 minute read
August 25, 2010 |

Marketplace

Intellectual property law firm Desmarais LLP, which specializes in complex technology disputes and patent litigation, recently signed a 10-year lease for more than 22,400 square feet at Monday Properties' class-A building at 230 Park Ave.
5 minute read
June 23, 2008 |

Immigration Law

Angelo A. Paparelli, president of the Alliance of Business Immigration Lawyers and managing partner of Paparelli & Partners, and Ted J. Chiappari, a partner at Satterlee Stephens Burke & Burke, write that the U.S. Department of Labor, an agency with a key role in administering the immigration laws, is clearly in a tizzy over fraud, or, more precisely, the perception of fraud within an alternate reality of the DOL's own creation. What else, they ask, can explain the agency's recent actions (some overt and others in stealth mode) restricting the role of lawyers in the employment-based immigration process?
20 minute read
October 20, 2003 |

Not afraid to go to the mat

Profile: John S. Zieser, vice president-Corporate Employee Services Group, general counsel, corporate secretary, Meredith Corp.
5 minute read
December 28, 2009 |

Immigration Law

Ted J. Chiappari, a partner at Satterlee Stephens Burke & Burke, and Angelo A. Paparelli, a partner at Seyfarth Shaw, write that, regrettably, since the line between permitted business activities and prohibited work is fuzzy, the consequences of opting in good faith, but incorrectly, for the position that the proposed activity constitutes business can be significant.
11 minute read
July 31, 2006 |

Makeover artist

Profile of Deirdre Stanley, senior vice president and general counsel, The Thomson Corp.
5 minute read

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