Legal News – LexBlogosphere: 3/25/08
By Rob La Gatta
March 25, 2008
The ChinaLat Law Blog comes back to life this morning, joining a group of our more frequent bloggers for today’s update. Also of note is Dave Donoghue’s post on Troll Tracker, whose case recently led to our post on the potential risks of anonymous blogging.
- Observations of a very intelligent truck driver – Georgia attorney Ken Shigley in his Atlanta Injury Law & Civil Litigation Blog
- Agreement to expand judicial review of arbitration award not enforceable under FAA – Seattle lawyer John Parnass of Davis Wright Tremaine in the firm’s Washington Construction Law Blog
- China applies new money laundering law to corruption – lawyer & attorney Hongwei Shang at Diaz Reus Rolff & Targ in the firm’s ChinaLat Law Blog
- Back to the well: fiduciaries and subprime assets – Massachusetts attorney Stephen Rosenberg of The McCormack Firm in his Boston ERISA & Insurance Litigation Blog
- Troll Tracker allowed to blog – Illinois lawyer R. David Donoghue of DLA Piper in his Chicago IP Litigation Blog
- Chiropractors accused of multistate scam – Dallas attorney Majed Nachawati of Fears Nachawati in the firm’s Texas Injury Law Blog
- Money matters! And even more so in a slow economy – Philadelphia lawyer David S. Rasner of Fox Rothschild in the firm’s Pennsylvania Family Law Blog
- Texas tax enforcement: determining which individuals may have personal liability for taxes owed to the state by newly-taxable entities that forfeit their right to transact business in Texas – Dallas attorney Alan E. Sherman in his Texas State & Local Tax Law Blog
- Minority oppression in relation to “fair value” of stock – Lawrenceville lawyer Scott I. Unger of Stark & Stark in the firm’s New Jersey Law Blog
- Terminated Greenbrier CEO seeks $50 million from CSX – Charleston attorney Jeffrey Mehalic in his West Virginia Business Litigation Blog
Also worth noting: New York attorney Fred Abrams, author of the Asset Search Blog, received some press attention earlier this week: he was quoted in an article from Forbes’ April 7 issue titled Cash is King. The piece, which deals with the Eliot Spitzer case and what led up to the former governor’s resignation, features Fred’s opinion on just how traceable cash really is.
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