Friday, October 11, 2013

Jury Finds No Acceleration Defect With Toyota Camry

Headlines

• Jury Finds No Acceleration Defect With Toyota Camry

• Law Review Articles Need A Makeover, Study Finds

• Maine Challenged Over Termination of State Medical Assistance

• Former Black Flag Members Allowed to Keep Performing

• Court Ponders Restrictions on Adult Entertainment

• Federal Government: Closed Until Further Notice

• Sex Trafficking Court Holds Hope For The Oft-Blamed

• Spotlight Stymies Law Firms From Making Necessary Business Moves

• Op-ed: Congress, Look to the Supreme Court

• Ethics Guardians Are Falling Behind

Jury Finds No Acceleration Defect With Toyota Camry

Toyota has won the first bellwether trial over sudden acceleration defects after a Los Angeles jury found no design defects caused a 2006 Camry to suddenly accelerate, killing its 66-year-old driver. Read More »

Law Review Articles Need A Makeover, Study Finds

Judges, law professors, practicing attorneys and student editors alike believe that the current law review model needs reform, according to a new article based on an extensive survey of how those in the legal community view legal journals. Read More »

Maine Challenged Over Termination of State Medical Assistance

As the federal health care reform law continues to be a flashpoint during the government shutdown, a federal appeals court in Boston is grappling with whether a state can push legal non-citizen residents out of its low-income medical assistance program. Read More »

Former Black Flag Members Allowed to Keep Performing

Former members of the 1970s hardcore punk band Black Flag, who faced shutting down their reunion tour after a founding member sued over trademark infringement, can play on. Read More »

Court Ponders Restrictions on Adult Entertainment

A Massachusetts town and an adult entertainment company made their cases in the first known fight over a municipal law that restricts the dimensions of buildings where adult businesses operate. Read More »

Federal Government: Closed Until Further Notice

For the first time since 1996, the U.S. government has ground to a halt. The House of Representatives and the Senate are at odds over funding and all signs point to a continuing bitter fight. The National Law Journal and its sister publications at ALM will provide coverage throughout the shutdown. Read More »

Sex Trafficking Court Holds Hope For The Oft-Blamed

The New York State Judiciary announced a groundbreaking Human Trafficking Intervention Initiative last month to address the state's festering problem of sex trafficking. The effort's linchpin is simple: Treat trafficking victims like victims — even if arrested for prostitution. Read More »

Spotlight Stymies Law Firms From Making Necessary Business Moves

To paraphrase Justice Louis Brandeis, sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants. But the scrutiny, not all of which is well informed, is also leading to perverse consequences for some law firms. Read More »

Op-ed: Congress, Look to the Supreme Court

The front door of the Supreme Court faces the Capitol building. Across the top of the building's face, the Court's motto quietly declares "Equal Justice Under Law." On the First Monday of October, it seemed more like a shout. Read More »

Ethics Guardians Are Falling Behind

Legal ethics boards are trying to micromanage the use of the Internet by lawyers, rather than target actual deceptive practices that are obvious on their face. Read More »



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