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October 20, 2004 |

United States v. Juma Sampson

Defendant Was Subject to a Twenty-Year Mandatory Minimum Sentence
24 minute read
January 21, 2008 |

'Stoneridge' still leaves questions

Should lawyers, accountants, investment bankers and others rest easy after the U.S. Supreme Court's most recent securities decision? Yes and no. Stoneridge Investment Partners LLC v. Scientific-Atlanta Inc. is a definite loss for those pushing a "scheme" theory of liability for "secondary actors" in securities fraud, such as lawyers and bankers in the securites sector. But whether the decision is a total shutout depends on which of three main aspects is viewed as most critical.
4 minute read
May 22, 2013 |

Looking Behind the IRS Scandal

In December 2008, six weeks after Barack Obama was elected president, I participated in a panel on campaign finance at the annual conference of the Council of Governmental Ethics Laws in Chicago.
5 minute read
November 07, 2006 |

Political Parties Field Attorney Volunteers

4 minute read
February 01, 2011 |

Pennsbury Village Assocs., LLC v. McIntyre, PICS Case No. 11-0140 (Pa. Jan. 19, 2011) Eakin, J. (15 pages).

Appellee was unable to utilize the Environmental Immunity Act's protection and limited its protective reach was where pre-existing legal relationships manifested a party's intent not to participate in activity for which it would otherwise be shielded from liability pursuant to anti-SLAPP legislation. Reversed.
4 minute read
December 22, 2008 |

Take Heed of the Legal Risks of Web 2.0

Web 2.0 provides new ways for users to communicate and collaborate, such as blogs, wikis, social networks and file-sharing sites, and increasingly, it's part of the workplace. In addition to the benefits of Web 2.0, law firms and companies are beginning to realize its legal risks.
6 minute read
May 08, 2006 |

Close Enough?

The flood of business method patents after the Federal Circuit�s State Street decision has surged right into court. For alleged infringers, one old avenue of defense offers new promise: Business method patents may be especially vulnerable to attack on the grounds of indefiniteness.
10 minute read
April 13, 2006 |

Newsbriefs

3 minute read

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