Law Firms

A dispute between IBM and Amazon.com looks set to escalate, as IBM disclosed that it had launched legal action over alleged abuse of intellectual property by the internet retailer.

IBM said it had filed two lawsuits against Amazon, alleging that the group has infringed five patents. The patents cover technologies which Amazon uses to recommend additional purchases to customers, technologies that are used to store data, and technologies that determine which advertisements are displayed on the site. The lawsuits were filed in two district […]

A dispute between IBM and Amazon.com looks set to escalate, as IBM disclosed that it had launched legal action over alleged abuse of intellectual property by the internet retailer. Read More »

Jeffrey Skilling, Enron Corp.’s former chief executive officer, was sentenced to 24.3 years in prison for his role in the securities fraud that led to the energy trader’s collapse.

U.S. District Court Judge Sim Lake sentenced Skilling today at a hearing in Houston after listening to testimony of seven victims of the Enron fraud. A jury convicted Skilling, 52, in May on 19 counts of fraud, conspiracy and insider trading after a four-month trial. He faced a range of 24 to 30 years in

Jeffrey Skilling, Enron Corp.’s former chief executive officer, was sentenced to 24.3 years in prison for his role in the securities fraud that led to the energy trader’s collapse. Read More »

Google attracts millions of Web users every day. And, increasingly, it’s attracting the attention of plenty of lawyers, too. Over the last few years, the company has spent millions in legal fees and hired a small army of bright young lawyers, many of them technically proficient and experts in the field of intellectual property.

As Google has grown into the world’s most popular search engine and, arguably, the most powerful Internet company, it has become entangled in scores of lawsuits touching on a wide range of legal questions, including copyright violation, trademark infringement and its method of ranking Web sites. Any company that is large and successful is going

Google attracts millions of Web users every day. And, increasingly, it’s attracting the attention of plenty of lawyers, too. Over the last few years, the company has spent millions in legal fees and hired a small army of bright young lawyers, many of them technically proficient and experts in the field of intellectual property. Read More »

Dubai has generated a mountain of get-rich-quick buzz. In the last three years, ten Global 100 law firms, including DLA Piper, Vinson & Elkins, and Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, have opened offices here. Magic Circle firms, which already dominate the region, are expanding their presence.

Along Dubai’s Sheikh Zayed Road, construction cranes seem almost as plentiful as sand. Hotels and office buildings are going up by the dozen, and already some of the world’s most recognizable corporate names-CNN, Cisco Systems, and Microsoft-dot the landscape. There’s a billboard advertising “the most prestigious kilometer on the planet,” an extravagant new downtown project

Dubai has generated a mountain of get-rich-quick buzz. In the last three years, ten Global 100 law firms, including DLA Piper, Vinson & Elkins, and Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, have opened offices here. Magic Circle firms, which already dominate the region, are expanding their presence. Read More »

Former New York Stock Exchange Chairman Richard Grasso, whose $187.5-million compensation package fed public outrage over skyrocketing executive pay, could be forced to return up to $100 million under a court ruling released Thursday.

State Supreme Court Justice Charles Ramos said Grasso failed to ensure that the NYSE board understood the “magnitude” of his ballooning pay, particularly the more than $100 million in retirement benefits that he quietly accrued in his last few years on the job. The case was brought by New York Atty. Gen. Eliot Spitzer, who

Former New York Stock Exchange Chairman Richard Grasso, whose $187.5-million compensation package fed public outrage over skyrocketing executive pay, could be forced to return up to $100 million under a court ruling released Thursday. Read More »

A retired priest from Malta acknowledged today that he had intimate contact with a youthful Mark Foley that involved nudity and — on at least one occasion — “light touching,” but denied that he and Foley had “sexual intercourse.”

The Rev. Anthony Mercieca, in a telephone interview with The Washington Post from the Maltese island of Gozo, said he was surprised that his long-ago interaction with Foley had become linked to the scandal that erupted last month and cost the former congressman his job . Foley, who served as an altar boy at the

A retired priest from Malta acknowledged today that he had intimate contact with a youthful Mark Foley that involved nudity and — on at least one occasion — “light touching,” but denied that he and Foley had “sexual intercourse.” Read More »

A federal appeals court affirmed two jury verdicts in the World Trade Center property insurance case, leaving a maximum payout of $4.6 billion toward the redevelopment of Manhattan’s Ground Zero.

The ruling requires Swiss Reinsurance Co., a Lloyds of London syndicate and seven other insurers to treat the Sept. 11 terror attack as a single total loss claim, and pay trade center leaseholder Larry Silverstein accordingly. St. Paul Travelers Cos., Allianz SE and seven other insurers will be required to pay Silverstein on a two-loss

A federal appeals court affirmed two jury verdicts in the World Trade Center property insurance case, leaving a maximum payout of $4.6 billion toward the redevelopment of Manhattan’s Ground Zero. Read More »

The criminal case against Ken Lay came to an end Tuesday when a judge vacated his convictions and dismissed the indictment that brought him to trial.

U.S. District Judge Sim Lake granted the request by Lay’s estate to wipe out the convictions against the late Enron chairman, an outcome that was widely anticipated, given legal precedent. Lake also dismissed the indictment that was filed against him in 2004. In his ruling, Lake cited a decision in the 5th Circuit Court of

The criminal case against Ken Lay came to an end Tuesday when a judge vacated his convictions and dismissed the indictment that brought him to trial. Read More »

President Bush today signed into law a controversial Bill that permits the tough interrogation of foreign terror suspects and smooths the way for Guantanamo Bay detainees to be tried before military commissions without any legal representation.

Signing the Bill, Mr Bush described it as a “vital tool” in the fight against terrorism, but civil liberty campaigners said that it would allow prisoners to be held indefinitely and sentenced to death on evidence beaten out of them. Officially the Military Commissions Act protects detainees from blatant abuses during questioning such as rape,

President Bush today signed into law a controversial Bill that permits the tough interrogation of foreign terror suspects and smooths the way for Guantanamo Bay detainees to be tried before military commissions without any legal representation. Read More »

New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer’s public relations windfall following his triumph over insurer ING may have more to do with his gubernatorial ambitions than with compensating ripped off state teachers.

New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer has been claiming plenty of credit lately for championing his state’s teachers and forcing insurer ING to pay $30 million for foisting costly annuities on them under false pretenses. But the settlement is likely to do a lot more for Spitzer’s gubernatorial ambitions as he gears up for

New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer’s public relations windfall following his triumph over insurer ING may have more to do with his gubernatorial ambitions than with compensating ripped off state teachers. Read More »

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