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January 04, 2013 |

Passion in bronze: Tom Player explores his artistry as sculptor

Tom Player has always been an artist, but detoured for most of his professional life to practice law. Retired since 2009 from Morris, Manning & Martin, Player molded his truest passion as a sculptor into a second career.
5 minute read
October 02, 2007 |

Errors and slowdowns at mortgage servicers can leave home owners in a lurch

NEW YORK AP - A cancer diagnosis forced Lindsey Jennings to give up his government job. With less income, Jennings feared he might lose the home he and his wife Pearl built near Atlanta almost 20 years ago. So he asked for help.But Jennings, who needed to lower his monthly mortgage payment, was rejected for a loan modification.
6 minute read
May 19, 2003 |

How The savvy succeed in setting rates

Steven H. PollakSpecial to the Daily ReportAttorneys Bruce R. and Shayna M. Steinfeld learned what they were worth only after leaving their medium-sized Atlanta firms and starting their own law practice.When the husband-and-wife team launched their firm in 2000, they charged the same hourly rates they had at their former firms.
7 minute read
June 01, 2005 |

Andersen's Conviction Overturned

5 minute read
May 31, 2012 |

Unlock your charisma by listening

When people talk about charisma, they usually mean some sort of magnetic way of speaking that holds an audience riveted. But a new book, The Charisma Myth: How Anyone Can Master the Art and Science of Personal Magnetism, suggests that how we listen may have as much to do with charisma as how we speak.
3 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Library of Georgia Personal Injury Forms, Seventh Edition Authors: Michael L. Goldberg, Editor, Fried Rogers Goldberg, LLC View this Book

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August 06, 1999 |

ABA Panel Discusses Hate Crime

What's it like to journey into America's underbelly of hate? Texas Prosecutor Guy James Gray knows all too well after prosecuting one of the three suspects in the 1998 slaying of James Byrd Jr., who was chained to a pickup and dragged three miles along a rural road. Gray's experiences in this savage case earned him a seat on Friday's American Bar Association panel examining, in part, proposed enhancements to federal hate crimes legislation. His position: The changes aren't necessary.
4 minute read
October 14, 2013 |

Inadmissible

"Top Texas M&A Firms," "A Birthday Swim," "Georgetown Court Appointments," "Firm Acquires Aviation Boutique"
5 minute read
December 13, 2007 |

GCs Draw Line in the Sand Over Changes to Patent Law

Changes in patent rules -- in the courts, in Congress and in federal regulations -- have forced general counsel to take sides against each other and caused some outside attorneys to sound an alarm. Research companies say restrictions hinder innovation while tech companies say reform is needed to curb patent trolls.
5 minute read
August 18, 2008 |

On The Rise: Jon-Peter F. Kelly

When federal prosecutors launched an investigation of the Atlanta Police Department's narcotics squad following the shooting of 92-year-old Kathryn Johnston, U.S. Attorney David E. Nahmias enlisted one of his younger assistants-Jon-Peter F. Kelly-for a key role on the controversial, high-profile case. Kelly, now 35, had been an assistant U.
4 minute read
October 18, 2005 |

Sarbanes-Oxley Act 'Has Been Quite a Ride,' Co-Author Says

Janet L. [email protected]. Michael G. Oxley has garnered both fame and blame since co-authoring the now three-year-old corporate governance initiative known as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. On the fame side, the chief financial officer of a Midwestern company asked Oxley to autograph a pair of tube socks-a play on the Sarbanes-Oxley acronym SOX.
5 minute read

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