Justices on sequestration; murky Blackwater case; a K&L Gates odyssey; Ramirez wastes no time at the FTC; Jones Day emergency in Detroit; deer hunting a go in Rock Creek Park; and Taranto's confirmed
Toyota says its problems with sudden unintended acceleration are in the rearview mirror, but newly disclosed documents raise questions that experts say have not yet been answered
Originally Published: Corporate Counsel
Peter Nesgos, who specializes in corporate deals in the space and satellite industry at Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy in New York, talks to NLJ about the business of financing satellites
...Administration launched the study at the request of Congress, and it enlisted NASA engineers to research whether electronic systems or electromagnetic interference played any role...
The joy of the game; DOJ tests lawyers' patience; drawing a line in the sand for art; Okun joins Adduci; Olson stands in for Biden in prep; Brooks sentenced; and Holland & Knight lobbies for space-st
National Law Journal
...rule would require an oral hearing. See Gulf Coast Inv. Corp. v. Nasa 1 Bus. Ctr., 754 S.W. 2d 152 (Tex. 1988) (oral hearing...
Justice Samuel Alito Jr.'s concurring opinion in the U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision involving the Fourth Amendment and GPS surveillance triggered as many conflicting reviews among scholars, cou
A California judge on Thursday selected the first bellwether case against Toyota in consolidated state litigation over the automaker's sudden, unintended acceleration problems
...of an officer's text messages on his work pager, and NASA v. Nelson, concerning background checks of government scientists and contractors. Both...
"Indict a ham sandwich" and other legal lingo explained; a big win for Crowell & Moring's pro bono client; the Justice Department's most satisfied employees; Judge Ruiz takes on language access; John
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