Law Firms

Legal troubles continue to mount for Qualcomm, with it’s top lawyer now leaving following a string of court defeats for the mobile technology vendor.

Lou Lupin has resigned as executive vice president and general counsel, the company said in a statement Monday. The announcement came just days after Qualcomm failed to win a reversal of an import ban on new cell phones that use some of its chips and also was told it can’t enforce some patents on video […]

Legal troubles continue to mount for Qualcomm, with it’s top lawyer now leaving following a string of court defeats for the mobile technology vendor. Read More »

The Queen’s fury at the BBC trailor for a documentary, purporting to show her storming out of an Annie Liebovitz photo shoot, may yet turn into a legal shooting war, the Sunday Telegraph reports.

The Queen has instructed her lawyers to take action over the way a BBC programme trailer misrepresented her by suggesting she had stormed out of a photo shoot. Farrer & Co, solicitors to the Queen, have written to RDF Media Group, the film company which made the programme for the corporation. It is understood the

The Queen’s fury at the BBC trailor for a documentary, purporting to show her storming out of an Annie Liebovitz photo shoot, may yet turn into a legal shooting war, the Sunday Telegraph reports. Read More »

Canada’s top judge says the Canadian legal system’s high cost is an `urgent’ problem that must be addressed, But lawyer’s recent accusations of money-grubbing among his peers won’t help, chief justice says

Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin has issued a call to action to governments, lawyers and judges to find solutions to the access-to-justice “crisis” imperilling the country’s legal system, which is now too expensive and complicated for the vast majority of Canadians. In a speech to the Canadian Bar Association yesterday, the country’s top judge declared access

Canada’s top judge says the Canadian legal system’s high cost is an `urgent’ problem that must be addressed, But lawyer’s recent accusations of money-grubbing among his peers won’t help, chief justice says Read More »

Are celebrities entitled to a higher level of privacy protection than ‘mere mortals’?. Harry Potter author J. K. Rowling complained about a photographer taking pictures of her young son in his buggy on an Edinburgh street. Does he – and any other child of a celebrity – have the right to privacy?

July was a great month for J. K. Rowling – Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix hit the big screen and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the seventh and final book in the Harry Potter series, was published. However, this month has not started so well. There was nothing that J. K.

Are celebrities entitled to a higher level of privacy protection than ‘mere mortals’?. Harry Potter author J. K. Rowling complained about a photographer taking pictures of her young son in his buggy on an Edinburgh street. Does he – and any other child of a celebrity – have the right to privacy? Read More »

He’s said to be the richest man in the world. He’s certainly Latin America’s leading business mogul. As Forbes reports, Carlos Slim may eventually need to respond to growing criticism over his monopolistic telecom business.

Mexican businessman Carlos Slim is now said to be the world’s richest man. He is Latin America’s leading business mogul, acquiring telecommunication assets and banking and retail businesses throughout the region and beyond. His massive increase in wealth in recent years should further increase public scrutiny of Slim and his business empire, particularly within Mexico.

He’s said to be the richest man in the world. He’s certainly Latin America’s leading business mogul. As Forbes reports, Carlos Slim may eventually need to respond to growing criticism over his monopolistic telecom business. Read More »

In a further sign that Robert Mugabe’s Zimbabwe is a basket case collapsing into a legal quagmire as dangerous as its economic ruin, a new surveillance law targets “journalists with hidden agendas”.

A sweeping surveillance law ratified Friday in Zimbabwe will target “imperialist-sponsored journalists with hidden agendas,” the country’s information minister told CPJ. Sikhanyiso Ndlovu described the law as intending “to protect the president, a minister, or any citizen from harm.” The Interception of Communications Act will allow authorities to intercept all phone, Internet, and mail communications,

In a further sign that Robert Mugabe’s Zimbabwe is a basket case collapsing into a legal quagmire as dangerous as its economic ruin, a new surveillance law targets “journalists with hidden agendas”. Read More »

Many thought the trial and its complex evidence would be too complex for a jury. The jury appeared at times strained and distraught. But ultimately their verdict gave the federal government a resounding victory.

Silence enveloped a San Francisco courtroom Tuesday after a jury dealt once-powerful high-tech executive Gregory Reyes a devastating blow by finding him guilty on all counts, ending the nation’s first criminal trial over the backdating of stock options. After six days of deliberation, the jury handed the federal government a resounding victory. Reyes could face

Many thought the trial and its complex evidence would be too complex for a jury. The jury appeared at times strained and distraught. But ultimately their verdict gave the federal government a resounding victory. Read More »

The Bush administration rushed to defend new espionage legislation Monday amid growing concern that the changes could lead to increased spying by U.S. intelligence agencies on American citizens.

The Bush administration rushed to defend new espionage legislation Monday amid growing concern that the changes could lead to increased spying by U.S. intelligence agencies on American citizens. In a push to counter criticism of the new law, senior administration officials cited a combination of legal barriers and resource restrictions that they said will keep

The Bush administration rushed to defend new espionage legislation Monday amid growing concern that the changes could lead to increased spying by U.S. intelligence agencies on American citizens. Read More »

In a move that surprised few, home lender American Home Mortgage Investment filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in a Wilmington, Del court today.

American Home Mortgage Investment filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection yesterday in Wilmington, Del., capping a tumultuous 10 days for what had been one of the nation’s biggest home lenders. The company, based in Melville, N.Y., said it fell victim to “extraordinary disruptions” in the markets that support the mortgage industry. A weak housing market

In a move that surprised few, home lender American Home Mortgage Investment filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in a Wilmington, Del court today. Read More »

Bert Fingerhut was a top securities analyst on Wall Street who retired to Aspen at 40. Inspired by Peter Lynch’s “Beating The Street” he developed a new, winning system. Only problem is, as the WSJ reports, he was breaking the law.

In his day, Bert Fingerhut was a Wall Street player. A top-ranked securities analyst for eight straight years, making calls that moved markets, Mr. Fingerhut rose to director of research at Oppenheimer & Co. in 1980. Three years later, he retired to Aspen, Colo. He was 40 years old. In the Rockies, Mr. Fingerhut became

Bert Fingerhut was a top securities analyst on Wall Street who retired to Aspen at 40. Inspired by Peter Lynch’s “Beating The Street” he developed a new, winning system. Only problem is, as the WSJ reports, he was breaking the law. Read More »

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