He’s thinner, but the combative dictator Saddam Hussein is back at his accusing best – requesting to be shot if he is condemned to death.

Gaunt, pale and weary but distinctively impertinent, Saddam Hussein emerged from a hunger strike for closing defense arguments today in the first trial examining the alleged crimes of his deposed government. The former Iraqi president, sturdy though fed through a tube for more than two weeks and hospitalized for the last three days, lashed out […]

He’s thinner, but the combative dictator Saddam Hussein is back at his accusing best – requesting to be shot if he is condemned to death. Read More »

A high-profile lawyer has taken to wearing women’s clothing in what he says is a gender-bending protest against the male-dominated corruption of New Zealand’s judicial system.

Rob Moodie, 67, a former representative rugby player and Police Association secretary, turned heads at the High Court in Wellington yesterday when he arrived for a hearing dressed in a skirt and carrying a handbag. Dr Moodie, a married father of three, says his behaviour is not a publicity stunt. He is heterosexual but has

A high-profile lawyer has taken to wearing women’s clothing in what he says is a gender-bending protest against the male-dominated corruption of New Zealand’s judicial system. Read More »

The largest law firms in the US, long dominated by white men, have struggled to attract, keep and promote minority and women lawyers. Now they have an incentive to do better.

Some of their biggest corporate clients are demanding that they increase the number of minority and women associates and partners. Indeed, for some companies, diversity is as important as cost-cutting and performance when evaluating which law firm to hire. And they are threatening to fire firms that do not show enough progress. Until recently, “law

The largest law firms in the US, long dominated by white men, have struggled to attract, keep and promote minority and women lawyers. Now they have an incentive to do better. Read More »

In a classic David vs. Goliath tale, a tiny outfit used some damning recordings and its media savvy to thwart a lawsuit brought by Enron.

Who can forget the voices of Enron’s traders, caught on tape as a damaging wildfire raged during the California energy crisis, exulting in the profits they were reaping from the state’s misery? “Burn, baby, burn,” one said gleefully. Many of those tapes would never have seen the light of day if it weren’t for a

In a classic David vs. Goliath tale, a tiny outfit used some damning recordings and its media savvy to thwart a lawsuit brought by Enron. Read More »

Ever wondered what a top English barriser earns? Well ‘The Lawyer’s’ Top 100 lists Brick Court Chambers as the highest-turnover chambers. Sixty two barristers took in an average of £516,000.

Headed by the redoutable Jonathan Sumption QC and Jonathan Hirst QC, Brick Court Chambers remains the UK’s largest set by turnover and is one of only four chambers to post a revenue per barrister figure of more than £500,000. The set’s case list is one to be envied. The year saw Sir Sydney Kentridge QC

Ever wondered what a top English barriser earns? Well ‘The Lawyer’s’ Top 100 lists Brick Court Chambers as the highest-turnover chambers. Sixty two barristers took in an average of £516,000. Read More »

Hogan & Hartson was one of seven firms to enter The American Lawyer A-List this year, and it made the cut by doing well on each of the four measures that the magazine uses to determine its rankings — revenue per lawyer, pro bono, diversity and associate satisfaction. But pro bono was its x-factor.

Hogan & Hartson was on a roll as it marked its 100th anniversary in November 2004. The firm was in the middle of an international expansion, was seeing a big jump in corporate work, and remained — in spite of greater competition inside the Beltway — the largest firm in Washington, D.C. Partners were in

Hogan & Hartson was one of seven firms to enter The American Lawyer A-List this year, and it made the cut by doing well on each of the four measures that the magazine uses to determine its rankings — revenue per lawyer, pro bono, diversity and associate satisfaction. But pro bono was its x-factor. Read More »

Legal Aid in Britain is a vital element of the welfare state: justice for all is as much a part of what Labour is about as is education for all and healthcare for all. But it is becoming unaffordable.

But just as education and the NHS need reform, so too does legal aid. Legal aid spending is rising to unaffordable levels, and the balance of expenditure is wrong. We need to redirect and rebalance the system. Governments of different political stripes have been wrestling with this problem for years. Our job is to provide

Legal Aid in Britain is a vital element of the welfare state: justice for all is as much a part of what Labour is about as is education for all and healthcare for all. But it is becoming unaffordable. Read More »

Microsoft yesterday called on the European Union’s top antitrust regulator to step back from the threat of further financial penalties, in a last-ditch intervention ahead of a ruling against the company that is expected next week.

A draft of the European Commission ruling is due to be presented to competition watchdogs from the 25 EU member states today. According to several people close to the case, it will find Microsoft guilty of violating antitrust rules by ignoring the Commission’s landmark 2004 ruling against the group, which was accompanied by a record

Microsoft yesterday called on the European Union’s top antitrust regulator to step back from the threat of further financial penalties, in a last-ditch intervention ahead of a ruling against the company that is expected next week. Read More »

Convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff improperly obtained a top-secret FBI document and tried to use the information to aid his clients in the Pacific Island territories, according to a report released Friday by the Justice Department’s inspector general.

The lobbyist feared information in the document could be damaging to his clients’ interests, the inspector general said, and he used his knowledge of its contents to warn them and to devise a counterattack. ‘Abramoff’s e-mail records indicate that by late June 2002 he had obtained a copy of the report from an official of

Convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff improperly obtained a top-secret FBI document and tried to use the information to aid his clients in the Pacific Island territories, according to a report released Friday by the Justice Department’s inspector general. Read More »

Four years after Miami-based law firm Greenberg Traurig started operating in the country, its business model of networking with and on behalf of Israeli companies is starting to pay off.

“We started coming to Israel during the Intifada when no one else was coming here,” Bob Grossman, principle shareholder and co-chair of the Israeli Practice Group at Greenberg Traurig told The Jerusalem Post. “Because there is so much technology and promise here, we felt it was a good time to come both from a business

Four years after Miami-based law firm Greenberg Traurig started operating in the country, its business model of networking with and on behalf of Israeli companies is starting to pay off. Read More »

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