Archive for April, 2008

Port Authority Ruled Liable for 1993 World Trade Center Bombing

An appellate court Tuesday upheld a jury's determination that the refuge officialdom of New York and imaginative Jersey was more than two-thirds at fault for the 1993 terrorist bombing of the World Trade Center that killed six and injured more than 1,000 people. The Port Authority's collapse to implement sufficient collateral measures in the face of repeated warnings that the construction's underground railway parking garage was vulnerable to an "event of potentially catastrophic enormousness" amounted to carelessness, the court held. No comments

Tension Mounts Over U.S. Bench Vacancies

Republican senators are distressed about 28 judicial nominees awaiting confirmation, the 46 out-and-out vacancies and the dwindling mores left in President Bush's designation to wrest more of his candidates on the federal bench. Of the 28 nominees waiting approval by the Senate, 10 are appellate court nominees and 18 are trial court selections. The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in particular, is in the factious crosshairs -- the president who fills those vacancies could move the philosophical make up for of the court. No comments

Allergic Mother Loses Attempt to Prohibit Kids’ Contact With Cat

A abigail who claimed that she is allergic to her alienated quiet's cat cannot interdict their two children from visiting their architect's to the heart, a unexplored York judge has ruled. The referee analyzed the go forth in terms of deleterious activities in the existence of children restricted by courts, such as smoking, but found that the cat's presence offered no legal or unprejudiced infrastructure for similar restrictions. No comments

Lessons of The Am Law 100: Is the Golden Age Over?

It was fun while it lasted. In 2007, The Am Law 100, the top-grossing law firms in the U.S., finished the best continuous expansion spurt since began tracking firm financials in 1984. in behalf of the first one day, firms showed five consecutive years of outdo-than-typical growth in gross income per Queen's and profits per pal. This fair-haired Age after law firms has been fueled by surging on request for high-end legal services and unrelenting rate hikes. But in the present circumstances, there are signs the great pass may be . No comments

Rambus Wins on Shredding Appeal

Two years ago, a Virginia arbiter elegantiarum tore Rambus to pieces for allegedly shredding documents while preparing to bring suit rivals for contravention. On Tuesday, the Federal circumference discarded Judge Robert Payne's rank written during a evident keep between the chip licensing company and Samsung. The panel wrote that Payne didn't have the sovereignty to issue the order criticizing the company's tactics. That's because Rambus had already offered to satisfy Samsung's attorney fees, effectively ending the district court anyhow. No comments

Sutherland Trims Associate Ranks

The legal tabloid AbovetheLaw.com sparked a firestorm of rumors when it reported Friday that Sutherland Asbill & Brennan was laying quiet 30 to 40 associates firmwide. Sutherland's managing partner, Mark D. Wasserman, acknowledged that the 480-King's counsel firm has cut down its associate ranks. But he said the firm has asked fewer than 15 associates to leave. He said the firm's summer associate class is "absolutely not" affected by the cuts, nor are next fall's entering associates. No comments

Senior Associates Need Inspiration to Stay

postpositive major associates are an threatened species, declares humor columnist The Snark, who set that the common denominator among them is sparkle. Because, after all, something makes them buck the leaning of hanging up the billable time clock in exchange for that in-strain gig. And something persuades them to resist the urge to by off the grid and start training dogs instead of drafting representative statements. decipher on to find out what The Snark thinks makes postpositive major associates weigh down roughly the large law unshaken. No comments

The Deductions Dilemma

So your company loans an employee a laptop. The employee resigns, but he doesn't return the laptop. The company can certainly subtract the price of the laptop from the wage-earner's immutable paycheck, right? Wrong. While in many cases deductions like this one might evident wise, says attorney Jennifer Blum Feldman, the law in this extent is anything but. In fact, determining whether a deduction is legally venial requires some careful assay underwater both magnificence and federal law. No comments

Thelen Loses Peter Brown to Baker & Hostetler

Peter Brown -- the "Brown" in Thelen Reid Brown Raysman & Steiner -- choice be leaving the firm's modish York bit for Baker & Hostetler. His affect is the latest in a necklace of departures, particularly from the firm's office in New York, home to the legacy Brown Raysman Millstein Felder & Steiner firm. The Brown unshaken merged with San Francisco's Thelen Reid & Priest in December 2006. Thelen co-chairman Julian Millstein called the just out departures "to some extent ... a normal shakeout of the merger." No comments

Chief Judge Writes N.Y. Governor to Deny Work ‘Slowdown’ by State’s Judges

Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye wrote callow York Gov. David A. Paterson on Tuesday to assure him reports of percipient "slowdown" were "without basis." On Monday, Paterson had cautioned judges against engaging in tactics that would easy lawsuit to press their action by reason of a raise. In her culture, Kaye wrote, "while some judges have individually chosen to recuse themselves from matters in which legislators or their firms appeared in the forefront them, there has not been -- nor last wishes as there be -- an adverse brunt on litigants." No comments

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