Legal News – LexBlogosphere: 1/8/09
January 8, 2009
On the night of the BCS National Championship Game, we have multiple sports-related posts: Josh MacFadden on controversy surrounding the Hockey Canada logo and Scott Grossman on Denver Nugget guard J.R. Smith’s involvement in a fatal car accident.
- Hockey Canada Logo Controversy – Saskatchewan attorney Josh MacFadden on his blog, Canadian IP Perspectives
- Dealing With Troubled Companies – Does Purchasing Assets Avoid Seller Liabilities? – The blogging lawyers and attorneys at Sheppard Mullin on their Bankruptcy and Restructuring Blog
- Significant California Decisions in 2008: What is an “Accident” and Whether an Excess Insurer Must Pay Where the Primary Settled for Less Than Policy Limits – San Francisco lawyer Sara Thorpe of Gordon & Rees on the National Insurance Law Forum
- Study Shows Significant Racial Discrimination In Advertising Industry – The blogging constitutionalists at the American Constitution Society in their ACS Blog
- The Old Switcheroo: An Employer’s Obligation to Employee Work Hours – Lancaster attorney Christina Hausner of Russell, Krafft & Gruber on the firm’s Pennsylvania Employment Law Blog
- Pharmaceutical and Medical Device Industries Face RFID / SCM Challenges and Opportunities in 2009 – The blogging lawyers & attorneys at McKenna Long & Aldridge on the firm’s RFID Law Blog
- J.R.Smith Not to be Indicted by Monmouth County Grand Jury for Role in Fatal Accident – New Jersey lawyer Scott Grossman on his New Jersey Accident and Injury Law Blog
- New federal rules make it more difficult to get information – Spartanburg attorney Ray Mullman of Poliakoff & Associates in the firm’s South Carolina Nursing Home Blog
- Conversation About Length of Time Employee Expected to Manage Store Does Not Create Contract, Court Says – Hartford lawyer Daniel Schwartz of Pullman & Comley in his Connecticut Employment Law Blog
- They Do The Mess Around: How A Third-Party Can Get Walloped For Contempt in Discovery – Philadelphia attorney Maxwell Kennerly of The Beasley Firm at his blog, Litigation & Trial
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