The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday handed a victory to 11,000 small gas station owners and their Miami attorneys in the longstanding class action battle against ExxonMobil Corp. which will cost the company $1.3 billion

The ruling, which hinged on jurisdiction issues, may not put an end to the case, which began working it way through the courts in 1991. There are more than 11,000 claims pending and attorneys at Miami-based Stearns Weaver Miller Weissler Alhadeff & Sitterson expect to spend years getting all of the claims paid. “We expect […]

The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday handed a victory to 11,000 small gas station owners and their Miami attorneys in the longstanding class action battle against ExxonMobil Corp. which will cost the company $1.3 billion Read More »

The end of a complex fraud trial in England is likely to be the most expensive case to collapse, costing the British taxpayers around £65 million.

The collapse of one of Britain’s most expensive criminal prosecutions has left taxpayers footing an estimated bill of £65m. A judge finally called a halt to the complex fraud hearing after defence lawyers accused the prosecution of withholding vital evidence which had denied the defendants the chance of a fair trial. It is believed to

The end of a complex fraud trial in England is likely to be the most expensive case to collapse, costing the British taxpayers around £65 million. Read More »

A former North Carolina Supreme Court justice has filed a lawsuit challenging state incentives given to Dell.

Former N.C. Supreme Court Justice Robert Orr has filed, on behalf of seven plaintiffs from across the state, a lawsuit challenging state and local incentives given to Dell Inc. to convince the company to invest $100 million in a 1,500-employee computer manufacturing plant in southeast Winston-Salem. Orr, now executive director of the Raleigh-based N.C. Institute

A former North Carolina Supreme Court justice has filed a lawsuit challenging state incentives given to Dell. Read More »

Reed Smith is in merger talks with Chicago litigation and IP specialist Wildman Harrold in a deal that would create a 1,200-lawyer firm, Legal Week can reveal, in the latest merger bid to hit the consolidating US legal market.

Reed Smith is in merger talks with Chicago litigation and IP specialist Wildman Harrold in a deal that would create a 1,200-lawyer firm, Legal Week can reveal, in the latest merger bid to hit the consolidating US legal market. Sources at Reed Smith confirmed the talks, which are at an early stage. A successful tie-up

Reed Smith is in merger talks with Chicago litigation and IP specialist Wildman Harrold in a deal that would create a 1,200-lawyer firm, Legal Week can reveal, in the latest merger bid to hit the consolidating US legal market. Read More »

A federal appeals court said yesterday that the Securities and Exchange Commission must produce a cost-benefit analysis to justify a rule that boards of mutual funds must have an independent chairman and at least 75 percent of directors who are independent.

A federal appeals court said yesterday that the Securities and Exchange Commission must produce a cost-benefit analysis to justify a rule that boards of mutual funds must have an independent chairman and at least 75 percent of directors who are independent. The ruling, by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia

A federal appeals court said yesterday that the Securities and Exchange Commission must produce a cost-benefit analysis to justify a rule that boards of mutual funds must have an independent chairman and at least 75 percent of directors who are independent. Read More »

A federal judge has declined to dismiss a civil suit brought by a husband and wife who claim that Sidley Austin Brown & Wood and Deutsche Bank Securities Inc., offered a tax shelter the firms knew would be challenged by the IRS.

A federal judge has declined to dismiss a civil suit brought by a husband and wife who claim that Sidley Austin Brown & Wood and Deutsche Bank Securities Inc., offered a tax shelter the firms knew would be challenged by the Internal Revenue Service. Southern District Judge Shira Scheindlin said William and Sharon Seippel’s complaint

A federal judge has declined to dismiss a civil suit brought by a husband and wife who claim that Sidley Austin Brown & Wood and Deutsche Bank Securities Inc., offered a tax shelter the firms knew would be challenged by the IRS. Read More »

A London Baker + McKenzie lawyer who was publicly ridiculed after demanding £4 from a secretary to dry clean his trousers has resigned.

The most famous ketchup stain in London has claimed its first victim. Richard Phillips, the City lawyer whose suit was soiled by the misdirected tomato sauce, has resigned from his position, it was announced yesterday. Mr Phillips, 36, had decided to take a “long-planned” study break from work as the spillage continued to exercise the

A London Baker + McKenzie lawyer who was publicly ridiculed after demanding £4 from a secretary to dry clean his trousers has resigned. Read More »

It may be a specialty niche, but itsn’t specialties the way forward for small law firms?

Last year, Tsan Abrahamson jumped from her post as worldwide IP and licensing counsel at LeapFrog Enterprises Inc. to start her own firm focused on sweepstakes and trademark law. Now she’s getting reinforcements. Katherine Spelman, a partner at DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary, joined the firm last week, along with Deborah Davis Han, a former

It may be a specialty niche, but itsn’t specialties the way forward for small law firms? Read More »

Edgar Ray Killen, an 80-year-old former preacher, was convicted of manslaughter in the 1964 deaths of three civil-rights workers in Mississippi after jurors rejected murder charges pressed by prosecutors.

It was likely the final chapter in a story that has troubled a generation. On the 41st anniversary of the disappearance of three young, idealistic civil rights workers near here, a jury pronounced Edgar Ray Killen guilty today of three counts of manslaughter in their deaths. Mr. Killen, 80, sat in a wheelchair, the thin

Edgar Ray Killen, an 80-year-old former preacher, was convicted of manslaughter in the 1964 deaths of three civil-rights workers in Mississippi after jurors rejected murder charges pressed by prosecutors. Read More »

Is the British jury system under attack? Plans to abolish jury trials in complex fraud cases forsakes an 800-year-old tradition. Where will it stop – or has it already?

Plans to abolish juries in complex fraud trials do not amount to a general attack on jury trial, the Attorney General insisted today. Lord Goldsmith QC unveiled plans to enact a change in the law which was passed by Parliament more than 18 months ago. It will allow a single judge to sit on complex

Is the British jury system under attack? Plans to abolish jury trials in complex fraud cases forsakes an 800-year-old tradition. Where will it stop – or has it already? Read More »

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