• January 17, 2007 | Legal Times

    Judges Look to Clerks With Experience

    Julia Kiraly doesn't fit the profile of a judicial clerk, the Ivy Leaguer who jumps directly from law school to a judge's chambers. After hopscotching from Venable to Hogan & Hartson and back t

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  • October 5, 2009 | National Law Journal

    Federal Circuit chief: Let us handle the fixes

    Hoping to stave off congressional action, the chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit is pressing lawyers to push for more cases that force the court to addres

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  • April 5, 2010 | Corporate Counsel

    A Look at Last Year's High-Profile IP Litigation

    As with any practice, victory in IP litigation can be defined a number of ways. Perhaps it comes in the form of a multimillion-dollar jury verdict. Or as a judge's ruling affirming the validity of

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  • February 29, 2008 | The Recorder

    Court's New Rules to Streamline IP Cases

    The Northern District is implementing new rules meant to streamline increasingly complex patent suits � but some lawyers fear the changes are too restrictive. The U.S Distri

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  • March 9, 2011 | New Jersey Law Journal

    Saffos v. Avaya Inc.

    Saffos v. Avaya Inc., A-3189-08T2; Appellate Division; opinion by Miniman, J.A.D.; decided and approved for publication March 8, 2011. Before Judges Cuff, C.L. Miniman and Fasciale. On appeal from

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  • May 1, 2008 | The American Lawyer

    Schoolhouse Rock

    When David Schizer was a first-year associate at New York's Davis Polk & Wardwell, he remembers being asked to mark up a stock purchase agreement. "I said I was happy to do it," he recalls, "but t

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  • July 1, 2012 | Corporate Counsel

    A Niche With Staying Power

    It's almost become a lawyer meme that the International Trade Commission, a once-obscure quasi-judicial body, is a hot forum for patent disputes because it handles cases quickly and offers po

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  • December 4, 2008 | Texas Lawyer

    Prudent Practices in a Bad Economy

    If Shakespeare were alive today, it may not be the lawyers he would suggest killing first. In any time of turmoil, the first thought on the mind of most observers is assigning blame. In the current

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  • December 1, 2003 | Legal Times

    Inadmissible: Sarbanes-Oxley; Dewey Ballantine; and More

    COURT POISED TO DECIDE REACH OF SARBANES-OXLEYSecurities lawyers who aren't keeping an eye on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit might want to start. The Atlan

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  • April 30, 2008 | The Recorder

    Rambus Wins on Shredding Appeal

    Two years ago, a Virginia judge tore Rambus to pieces for allegedly shredding documents while preparing to sue r

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