Headlines » Inside the Judgment Fund » NLRB's Quandary » Big Cases Still To Come » Salvage Company Presses Claim to Treasure » INADMISSIBLE » VOIR DIRE » MOVERS » IN BRIEF » The Careerist: Look Who's Hiring! » Judge: DOJ Victory a 'Warning, Not an Invitation' The federal government spent more than $4 billion to resolve lawsuits last year, a $1.3 billion increase from spending in 2011, an analysis of government records shows. Read More » President Barack Obama stepped back into the fray over the National Labor Relations Board last week, nominating two lawyers to fill vacant seats at an agency whose membership has drawn criticism from Republicans and questions of legality from a federal appeals court. Read More » In any ranking of high-profile Supreme Court cases, last month's arguments over same-sex marriage would be hard to beat. But the next and final argument cycle of this Supreme Court term is looking like a headline-grabber as well. Read More » More than three hundred years have passed since British and Spanish vessels clashed off the northern coast of South America. A fight over treasure sent to the ocean floor there, estimated to be worth billions of dollars, has turned into an epic legal battle that pits a salvage company against lawyers for the Republic of Colombia. Read More » Hearing a breeze for Srinivasan; Nathan's conditions; EPIC secrets; jobs available at DOJ; Hillard v. Sheppard for police monitor; keeping up with Jones; and a new group at Brownstein Hyatt in this week's column. Read More » Library win; more than Friends; crossing Rivers; and say "what" one more time in this week's column. Read More » Rebekah Plowman and Kristen McDonald join Jones Day's health care practice as partners in the Atlanta office. Plus more law firm movers in this week's column. Read More » A weekly roundup of Web-only stories from NLJ.com and other ALM publications. Read More » Despite the lousy legal market, there are job openings for lawyers. Check 'em out. Read More » A federal appeals court in Washington today unanimously overturned the suppression of evidence in a drug trafficking case, giving the government a second chance. But one judge on the panel cautioned that the U.S. Justice Department and police should not... Read More » |
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