Manhattan D.A. Will Not Seek Re-Election

February 27, 2009

You Can Do Magic — or Can You?

February 27, 2009

Sonnenschein to Shutter Charlotte Office

February 27, 2009

Less than two years after Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal announced the opening of its office in Charlotte, N.C., partners voted Friday afternoon to close up shop in the battered banking center. In a statement, Sonnenschein chair Elliott Portnoy cited "local marketplace realities, the declining demand for legal services in the Charlotte legal and financial markets, and the needs of our financial institution clients" as reasons for the move.

Some DOJ Lawyers Have Gitmo Conflicts

February 27, 2009

More than a dozen new DOJ lawyers come from private firms representing Guantanamo Bay detainees, creating potential conflicts of interest as the agency begins its review of about 245 detainees. Conflict-of-interest issues are common in new administrations, but Guantanamo poses a singular challenge due to the sheer scope of legal work. About 150 separate law firms, federal public defender offices, law school clinics and nongovernmental organizations have been involved in detainee litigation.

Shrinkage at Day Casebeer Shows IP Litigators No Longer Immune to Recession

February 27, 2009

Even a tiny law firm whose bread is buttered by relatively recession-proof patent litigation has had to lay off lawyers. As of last summer, Day Casebeer, the Silicon Valley firm of high-end IP boutique fame and Qualcomm discovery fiasco infamy, was 38 lawyers strong. Today, the firm has 27 lawyers. So what's the deal with cutting lawyers when most every layoff has been blamed on a slowdown in corporate work? The guy who makes the sun rise at the firm explained that there were two causes for the cuts.

Pa. Judges Face New Civil Suit Over Alleged Kickbacks

February 27, 2009

Two Pennsylvania judges charged with taking kickbacks to send youth offenders to private detention centers are facing another civil suit tied to the scandal. The suit, filed Thursday on behalf of juvenile offenders sentenced between 2003 and 2008, claims the judges perpetrated "what ranks as one of the largest and most serious violations of children's rights in the history of the American legal system." Mark Ciavarella and Michael Conahan pleaded guilty to fraud earlier this month and face more than seven years in prison.

Chicago Law Firm Cuts Pay for Attorneys, Top Administrators

February 27, 2009

Chicago's Much Shelist Denenberg Ament & Rubinstein has cut pay for its lawyers and top administrators by 10 percent to adjust to a slowdown. While the firm had a record December in terms of financial performance, "January was eerily quiet," and February has been difficult, according to Chairman David Brown. The firm has also started loaning out some of its idled lawyers to corporate clients at no charge to give the companies more legal help and align the interests of the firm and the client, he said.

Does the Supreme Court Tweet? Not Yet

February 27, 2009

Is the U.S. Supreme Court Twitter site another sign of the Court venturing into the modern era or just an impostor? The site looks official enough -- but any thoughts you might have had of the high court's justices fast-forwarding themselves into the BlackBerry Age will have to wait. A Supreme Court spokeswoman confirmed that the Twitter site is not connected to the high court. Recently, a Twitter site that appeared to belong to Attorney General Eric Holder Jr. also turned out to be a fake.

Federal Judge Dismisses Civil Rights Claims Against N.Y. Attorneys

February 27, 2009

Attorneys hired by a Long Island, N.Y., village cannot be held liable under federal civil rights law for the advice they offered, which a developer claims caused costly delays to his condominium project, a federal judge has ruled.

Will Feds Swing at Bonds, or Run to Umpires?

February 27, 2009

Barry Bonds' trainer may be heading to court for a much-publicized appearance this morning, but the only suspense will come from the prosecutors. Since Judge Susan Illston excluded key government evidence of Bonds' steroid use last week, legal observers have been guessing as to whether Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Parrella and his team will ask the 9th Circuit to step in, which would push back the perjury trial for months. Jury selection is currently scheduled to begin Monday.

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