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July 09, 2009 |

Corporate Warfare Has to Make Business Sense These Days

Cash is scarce throughout the economy, testing some convictions long held by in-house and outside counsel alike on the need to scrutinize old litigation habits, writes attorney Michael Cavendish. Some of the most endangered practices in corporate litigation are, not surprisingly, among the costliest, measured in price versus progress made in a lawsuit. But financial difficulty is providing vital new courses in business education to platoons of litigation managers and their leaders.
9 minute read
May 21, 1999 |

The End is Near, Get Ready

The Supreme Court is heading into the home stretch -- as in stretch and yawn. The Court's fairly slow pace of decision-making is evidenced by the fact that fully 31 decisions remain outstanding as the Court nears the final month of its term -- nearly 40 percent of the 78 total cases that will have been decided the entire term. The cases still outstanding are among its toughest and most interesting.
7 minute read
December 26, 2003 |

U.N. Prosecutor Helps Convict Rwandan Trio

Imone Monasebian is home for the holidays and the comparative tranquility of New York City, where she was a hip-hop journalist and poet some years ago. But her thoughts never stray far from the gravity of her legal work in East Africa.
6 minute read
October 01, 2010 |

Big Deals

Intel/McAfee; Blackstone/Dynegy; Carlyle/NBTY
8 minute read
August 06, 2010 |

Unpublished Opinions

Unpublished state and federal court decisions.
49 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Test Book May Second Edition 2024 Authors: Paul A. Rowe, Andrea J. Sullivan View this Book

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June 01, 2004 |

Pickett et al. v. Tyson Fresh Meats Swedish Match North America, Inc., v. U.S. Smokeless Tobacco Company R4 Holdings v. Tickets.

A group of cattle ranchers upset over corporate control of the meat market received a blue-ribbon antitrust jury verdict in February-only to have a judge sitting in Alabama decide that the jury had given the ranchers a bum steer. In April, U.S. district court judge Lyle Strom threw out a $1.28 billion verdict against one of the country's biggest beef packagers, Dakota Dunes, South Dakota-based Tyson Fresh Meats, Inc. The amount covered only actual damages.
7 minute read

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