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Posts from ‘December, 2008’

An In-House Lawyer’s Wild Backdating Ride

A plea deal released Monday by federal prosecutors in Los Angeles shows how in-house lawyer Richard Hirst’s California dreams got squashed. He’s not the one who pleaded guilty; rather, he comes off in the documents as the unwitting instrument in a corporate coverup at KB Home. And while he’ll likely escape jail, Hirst’s role is very far removed from what he probably had in mind when the out-of-town attorney left his GC slot at Burger King to become KB Home’s top lawyer.

Help for Law Firms Abounds in the Blogosphere


When Memoirs Are Fiction, Lawsuits Are a Fact


Bush Shoe-Thrower Gets Well-Heeled Defense


Pro Bono on the Rise in Down Times


Summary Judgment Denied in Multiyear Battle Over Magazine’s Online Use of Photos

New York federal Judge Gerard E. Lynch has declined to grant summary judgment to two French fashion designers who claim a U.S. news magazine violated fair use of their copyright by showing photographs of their full collections on the Internet. Lynch said he was not satisfied by the French corporations’ arguments on infringement and fair use and found there were several issues of fact to be decided on the issue of whether firstView’s publication of the photos was protected by the fair use doctrine.

Tech Amici Target High Damages in Microsoft-Lucent IP Case

Oracle, Apple, Yahoo, Intel and several others are throwing their weight behind Microsoft as it tries to persuade the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit to overturn a $500 million jury verdict for infringing on a Lucent patent. In amicus briefs filed this month, the tech companies are urging the court to rein in the “entire market value rule,” which allows the calculation of damages based on the whole product, even if just one feature is infringed.

Navy Settles With Environmental Groups in Wake of High Court Ruling

A Supreme Court ruling has a way of concentrating the minds of litigants. Six weeks after the high court issued its ruling on the impact of the U.S. Navy’s sonar training on marine mammals in , both sides have reached a settlement on issues related to — but not decided by — that case. Both the Navy and the NRDC are touting the settlement, which charts a course for future research by the Navy on sonar impact on marine mammals.

N.Y. High Court Bars Surrogate-Elect Over Campaign Contributions

The Court of Appeals on Monday barred Nora S. Anderson from becoming Manhattan surrogate on Jan. 1 pending the outcome of Manhattan District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau’s prosecution of her for allegedly failing to accurately report contributions to her campaign this summer. A 6-0 court suspended Anderson with pay effective Thursday, when the 10-year term she won earlier this year is to begin. The court gave no reasoning for its decision.

Attorney General: Cheney Interview Protected by Executive Privilege

The president may assert executive privilege to withhold from Congress records of an FBI interview with Vice President Dick Cheney regarding the leak of CIA agent Valerie Plame’s identity, Attorney General Michael Mukasey concludes in a legal opinion released Monday. Mukasey warned that, were the records turned over, White House officials would be less likely to cooperate in future investigations out of fear that their words would become public.