Thursday, April 4, 2013

Montana judge who slurred Obama quits the bench

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The National Law Journal -- Daily Headlines

TODAY'S NEWS

Montana judge who slurred Obama quits the bench

U.S. District Judge Richard Cebull, the former chief judge in Montana who filed a complaint against himself last year after acknowledging that he sent a racist email about President Obama, has announced plans to retire by May 3.



Report: Police and prosecutors getting more involved in exonerations

Police and prosecutors increasingly are working to clear the names of the wrongly convicted, according to a report released on Wednesday by a law school consortium.



Claims administrator rebuffs BP's effort to stop oil spill payments

The administrator doling out the $7.8 billion settlement to individuals and businesses harmed by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill has responded sharply to BP PLC's effort to block him from awarding what the company insists could amount to billions of dollars in "absurd windfalls."



Targeting your ideal client via LinkedIn

There used to be a time when layers of secretaries and executive assistants insulated decision-makers against strangers, including peddlers of services. It was hard to position yourself to meet and impress the boss. Social media—and LinkedIn in particular—have broken down those barriers.



THIS WEEK'S ISSUE

THE PRACTICE

VOIR DIRE

No peace of mind; anger management; Phil's inner circle takes the rap; and Klayman's latest battle in this week's column.



OPINION

Tales from the appellate bench

Would you want to author an opinion on the Pink Bollworm Control Act? A California court of appeal justice reflects on the unsung self-sacrifice of his colleagues.



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IN FOCUS

A tough road to defend remediation suits in Louisiana

State high court considers whether landowners can recover damages in excess of the cost of restoration.



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