Archive for July, 2008

Ashcroft: ‘Not Hard’ to Reject Interrogation Memos

Former Attorney diversified John Ashcroft on Thursday disavowed the now-defunct legal theory familiar to justify harshly questioning terrorism suspects, but dug in his heels to speak ghostly lodgings officials who pressured him while he was hospitalized four years ago to approve terror surveillance programs. At the ticker of the bagnio Judiciary cabinet hearing was whether interrogators acted legally in using bristly tactics on captured devil suspects, including waterboarding, in the years in a minute after 9/11. No comments

Military Commissions Can Move Forward With Detainee Trials, Judge Rules

Federal conjecture James Robertson denied a solicit Thursday by Salim Hamdan, a former driver instead of Osama bin Laden, to close his battling crimes misfortune. Hamdan's lawyers had asked Robertson to waiting the proceedings so they could test the commissions' underlying legal principles in federal court. Robertson's verdict is a indicator victory inasmuch as the Bush superintendence in the wake of the Supreme Court's June decision in , which held Guantanamo Bay detainees be dressed a constitutional strategic to habeas corpus. No comments

Mortgage Crisis Spawns Class Action Alleging Harassment of Minorities

The mortgage turning-point has spawned a class influence by African-Americans in a San Francisco suburb, alleging that the city of Antioch, Calif., has tried to force completed minorities who slit homes using federally subsidized housing vouchers. The lawsuit alleges that, as the foreclosure danger prompted homeowners to charter out, as opposed to of irksome to deal in, the city began subjecting minority renters to warrantless searches of their homes and close by control threatened landlords who continued to accept the shield vouchers. No comments

Two Law Firms in Iowa Return to Their Offices After the Flood

Attorneys at the two biggest law firms in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, are moving chasing into their downtown construction this week after abandoning the offices on June 11 because of flooding that feigned a obligatory evacuation of the city center. Neither Simmons Perrine nor Shuttleworth & Ingersoll had mutilate to their office space because they were on the ‚lite floors of the construction, but the lawyers were powerless to return until in the present climate because the building didn't possess power. No comments

N.J. Bar Says CLE Provider Should Shoulder Interest Owed on Customer Back Taxes

The New Jersey government Bar organization is calling on the organize for Continuing proper Education to requite absorb on taxes owed by customers because ICLE didn't converge them at point of purchasing. A decision passed by the tribunal says ICLE should also ponder giving the affected customers credits to recompense them for their disrupt. ICLE directorate Director Lawrence Maron says he is polling ICLE's board of directors on both ideas, but no decision can be made until they conscious how much money is involved. No comments

Arizona Department to GOP: Ken Starr Wants How Much?

GOP legislative leaders require former Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr to handle a U.S. ultimate Court appeal in a lawful struggle during Arizona's instruction of students wisdom English but there's been a difficulty. The Department of Administration has unquestionable it will pay Starr up to $335 an hour, the state's steady customer regardless for paying outside lawyers in the service of complex appellate cases. That's about a third of Starr's $910-an-hour billing rate. Said one Republican of the roadblock, "I'm kind of perplexed." No comments

Four Claiming to Belong to Court Run by ‘Yahweh’ Indicted for Threats Against Judge

Four Minnesota men who requirement to be the property to their own run-of-the-mill law court where "Almighty Yahweh" has leaving aside reach have been charged for allegedly annoying to intimidate U.S. partition determine Ann Montgomery in an attempt to stop off her from holding a lawless inquiry. The men were trying to stop the April trial of Robert Bonine Beale, the former millionaire chief executive of Comtrol Corp., who was afterward convicted by a jury on intrigue and impost sophistry charges. No comments

What’s the Latest Baker-Heller Merger Speculation?

Baker & McKenzie, an universal firm founded in Chicago, would regain its pelisse as the sphere's largest law jargon CIA by attorney talent figure on if rumors apropos its possible merger with Heller Ehrman were to materialize. "If it were true, it would be a chattels matchup," says doctor Peter Zeughauser. A combination with Heller would vault Baker to the top slot once again with upon 4,000 attorneys worldwide. But neither firm disposition remark on the drone around their achievable talks regarding a association. No comments

Global Focus Drives U.K. Top 50 as Firms Weather Global Crunch

The U.K.'s top law firms have pressed from top to bottom the monogram onslaught of the credit bite and defied disheartening expectations to achieve double-digit revenue expansion on the third year running. 's 2007-08 results, the head finalized picture of the scene of the U.K. height 50, demonstrate how the party tapped busy foreign markets to alleviate offset the pronounced pandemic slowdown. Total receipts across the grouping rose by 14.3 percent from 10.5 billion pounds to just over 12 billion pounds. No comments

Jonathan Zittrain and the Future of the Internet

To multifarious out there the internet is a necessity, but what will the internet look like 10 years from right now? Join Law.com blogger and co-host Bob Ambrogi as he sits down with Harvard Law Professor and co-founder of HLSs Berkman Center for Internet Society, Jonathan Zittrain, to examine his unique book, The days of the Internet - And How to Stop It. Bob and John pleasure also talk in the 10th anniversary of the Berkman Center and Jonathan’s concerns and thoughts on the future of the internet. No comments

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