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Lockheed Employee's YouTube Video Sounds Ethics Alarm
In 2003 Michael DeKort faced an ethical quandary. He thought his company's shipbuilding project for the U.S. Coast Guard was dangerously off-course. He was convinced that both sailors and national security were at risk -- but he couldn't persuade his superiors. When his concerns were ignored by managers up the line, he spent two years pursuing three separate internal investigations. Finally he contacted the press and elected officials -- to no avail. That's when he hit on a desperate gambit: YouTube.This Week in 'Law Journal' History
'Law Journal' stories through the last century.Worker's climb to power shows how strong demand is for young workers
A wave of demographic change is likely to benefit younger workers. A generational replacement cycle is taking hold as companies such as GE, Norfolk Southern Corp., Boeing, American Electric Power Co. and Dominion Resources all try to hire skilled younger staff to prepare for a wave of retiring workers.New Charges Against Ex-Prosecutor Accused of Witness Murder, Fraud
A grand jury has returned a second superseding indictment against defense attorney and ex-prosecutor Paul Bergrin, accused of running a crime ring fueled by murder, fraud and other criminal activity, this time adding racketeering charges.Racketeering Lawsuit by Biovail Backfires Against Company and Lawyers
Biovail Corp. was supposed to be the victim, the ill-used dupe of powerful hedge funds, analysts and bankers, whose short-selling scheme to spread false information about the company led to a plunge in its share price in 2003. And Biovail's respected litigators from Howrey and Kasowitz Benson were to be the ones to help the company prove it. How did the company's "extremely well-lawyered" legal strategy blow up in the faces of Biovail executives and lawyers, now the ones under scrutiny?View more book results for the query "White"
Racketeering Lawsuit by Biovail Backfires Against Company and Lawyers
Biovail Corp. was supposed to be the victim, the ill-used dupe of powerful hedge funds, analysts and bankers, whose short-selling scheme to spread false information about the company led to a plunge in its share price in 2003. And Biovail's respected litigators from Howrey and Kasowitz Benson were to be the ones to help the company prove it. How did the company's "extremely well-lawyered" legal strategy blow up in the faces of Biovail executives and lawyers, now the ones under scrutiny?Sailing On a Sea of Tranquility
This year the Supreme Court concentrated on issues with limited impact concerning the verbal threshold, scientific evidence, punitive damages, and products liability.Cite as: In Re Currency Conversion Fee Antitrust Litigation, MDL No. 1409, NYLJ 1202488718066, at *1 (SDNY, Decided March 29, 2011)District Judge William H. Pau
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