Recent rulings across the country.
- May 26, 2009ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
A computer forensic analysis reveals that the employee has accessed his personal Web-based e-mail account from his company computer and that his log-in information (username and password) has been recovered from the computer's memory. Can you log in to the account and read his personal e-mail?
May 26, 2009Marjorie J. Peerce and Daniel V. ShapiroThe long arm of U.S. jurisdiction generates a number of worries for counsel advising foreign businesses and executives who may be "of interest" to authorities here. One such worry is the status of foreign nationals entering the United States on business during the course of a criminal or civil investigation.
May 26, 2009Jeffrey T. GreenRare is the white-collar case today where an expert witness does not play a powerful role. But the vagueness in expert disclosure rules in criminal cases can lead unwary defense counsel to forfeit an expert entirely.
May 26, 2009Jodi Misher Peikin and James R. StovallLawyers representing directors and officers of IndyMac Bancorp Inc. are attempting to remove a cap on their billing rates, the latest example of how judges are scrutinizing hourly fees in large bankruptcies.
May 26, 2009Amanda BronstadWhen a creditor enters the realm of bankruptcy, lenders often find that the many detailed provisions of an extensively negotiated intercreditor agreement are no longer controlling. On the contrary, the intercreditor agreement may have little influence on the outcome of many critical matters that arise in bankruptcy.
May 26, 2009John D. FredericksExplaining that the "bankruptcy court had no jurisdiction to take such action," the Fifth Circuit also vacated the district's court's improper ruling that the bankruptcy judge could enter a personal judgment against the asset buyer.
May 26, 2009ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |Examiner appointments in Chapter 11 bankruptcy cases are uncommon, and despite Judge Peter J. Walsh's statement that he had appointed an examiner only two or three times during his career as a bankruptcy judge, he recently ordered the appointment of an examiner in In re DBSI, Inc.
May 26, 2009David J. Baldwin and R. Stephen McNeillCopyright Infringement/Parody
Mechanical Licenses/Prospective Song "Holds"
Right of Publicity/"Non-Commercial" Purpose
Sampling Licenses/Song InfringementApril 30, 2009Stan SoocherLawyers scurried to San Jose, CA, bankruptcy court in April to argue over the remains of SeeqPod Inc., the first big casualty on the newest front in the legal war between the record industry and the Internet.
April 30, 2009Zusha Elinson

