William Hubbard Tuesday became the president of the American Bar Association at its annual meeting in Boston.
Tagged with: American Bar Association
Read More »William Hubbard Tuesday became the president of the American Bar Association at its annual meeting in Boston.
Tagged with: American Bar Association
Read More »The U.S. is withholding documents that might show the government sued Standard & Poor’s in retaliation for downgrading the country’s debt, the ratings company said, asking a court to compel the records’ production.
Tagged with: Standard & Poor's
Read More »Charges for a man accused of fatally shooting his roommate were upgraded from involuntary manslaughter to second-degree murder and armed criminal action.
Tagged with: armed criminal action Arnold Involuntary Manslaughter second-degree murder
Read More »Missouri’s attorney discipline offices will be working out of an expanded facility in Jefferson City in about nine months.
Tagged with: Office of Chief Disciplinary Counsel
Read More »U.S. Internal Revenue Service told a judge its technicians made repeated futile efforts to save data on a malfunctioning computer hard drive used by Lois Lerner, the former official at the center of a dispute between Congress and the Obama administration over scrutiny of tea party groups.
Tagged with: Internal Revenue Service
Read More »The U.S. doesn’t have to disclose the telecommunications companies helping it collect phone call records or turn over a secret surveillance court’s orders, a federal judge ruled, saying the information would reveal methods used in terrorism investigations.
Tagged with: National Security Agency
Read More »Two Missouri men recently cleared of murder charges are moving forward with federal lawsuits against the people who prosecuted them.
Tagged with: malicious prosecution Mark Woodworth Ryan Ferguson
Read More »Activist Rev. Al Sharpton spoke to a crowd of journalists on Tuesday at the Old Courthouse in St. Louis about the shooting of an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson.
Tagged with: Ferguson shooting Michael Brown
Read More »Apple Inc., Google Inc., Intel Corp. and Adobe Systems Inc. failed to persuade a judge to approve a $324.5 million settlement over claims they agreed to not recruit each other’s workers.
Read More »The National Collegiate Athletic Association has a political option that provides possible political protection from future rulings like last week’s licensing decision.
Tagged with: NCAA
Read More »Lawyers for General Motors Co. customers are jostling to lead lawsuits over faulty ignition switches. They don’t know what they can sue for – a judge will tell them that – but they do want to be in charge.
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