Headlines • Judges: Law Clinic's Work Worth More Than Peanuts • For Eric Holder, There's No Escaping the Heat • Judge Unseals Details of Dodgers' Deal With Ex-Owner • Bradley Manning's Judge Called a 'Criminal Law Guru' • Two Men Photographed Near Boston Marathon Sue Newspaper • John Edwards Reportedly Returning to Private Practice • ITC Can Take Steps to Enforce Its Own Exclusion Orders • DNA Swabs for Arrestees: What's the 'Right" Answer? • The U.S. Government is Here to Help...Fight Corruption? • Law School Applications Are Up (But Down) A report by two federal magistrate judges in New York says that law students who participate in clinics may not yet be lawyers, but their time and effort still has monetary value. Read More » Attorney General Eric Holder Jr. defended himself Thursday amid growing criticism and calls for his resignation, saying on Capitol Hill that he has done a "good job" and would remain the nation's top law enforcement officer until he has accomplished his goals. Read More » The new owners of the Los Angeles Dodgers must make public a single document that reveals their financial arrangement with previous owner Frank McCourt, under a ruling made on Wednesday by a judge in Los Angeles. Read More » U.S. Army Private First Class Bradley Manning, charged with the most serious leak of classified documents in the nation's history, has put his fate in the hands of a judge who, in the words of a close colleague, has "done it all." Read More » Two Massachusetts men whose photos were splashed across the New York Post in an article claiming they were possible suspects in the Boston Marathon bombing have sued the newspaper for libel. Read More » After a public extramarital affair and his acquittal of violating campaign finance laws, John Edwards reportedly is returning to plaintiffs work. Citing anonymous sources, CNN reported Thursday that Edwards plans to launch a law practice in Raleigh, N.C. Read More » The commission should not wait for legislation or an adverse court decision but should act now to improve the Section 337 enforcement system. Read More » Reading the U.S. Supreme Court's 5-4 decision of June 3 in Maryland v. King, which upheld the right of the state to take a DNA swab from a person who was arrested, but not convicted, and use it to tie him to an unsolved rape, left me with two minds. Read More » When companies discuss U.S. government international anticorruption initiatives, they voice considerable suspicion. And while their skepticism is understandable, it may also be misplaced. Read More » Latest news about the law school market. Plus, a report on the report about law faculty diversity. Read More » |
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