|
|
|
Teen pleads guilty in Pa. officer's traffic death
Law News |
2010/06/07 09:24
|
A Philadelphia teenager has pleaded guilty in the death of a police officer whose cruiser he struck with a stolen SUV in 2008.pEighteen-year-old Andre Butler pleaded guilty to third-degree murder and other charges on Monday, the day his trial was scheduled to begin./ppPolice say Butler, then 16, was behind the wheel of a stolen Cadillac Escalade and leading police on a high-speed chase in September 2008 when the SUV crashed into a police car./ppForty-year-old Officer Isabel Nazario, who was in the cruiser's passenger seat, was killed instantly. Her partner was seriously injured./p |
|
|
|
|
|
Still no mystery man ID in Ore. court appearance
Law News |
2010/05/14 03:09
|
An Oregon man accused of assuming the identity of a slain Ohio boy has refused to reveal his true name in his latest court appearance.
pFederal prosecutors say the man claiming to be Jason Robert Evers — the name of the dead boy — must be hiding something but he will not say what it is./ppHe is listed as John Doe in court documents, including the criminal complaint charging him with providing false information on a passport application leading to his arrest in Idaho last month./ppThe man has worked for the last eight years as an Oregon liquor control investigator, but has been placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of his case./ppHe was extradited from Idaho this week and made his initial appearance in federal court in Oregon on Thursday./p |
|
|
|
|
|
NY court axes suit vs. label over Remy Ma shooting
Law News |
2010/05/13 09:10
|
A New York appeals court has rebuffed an attempt to hold Remy Ma's former record label accountable for the rapper's shooting of an acquaintance in 2007.pTuesday's ruling notes that a Universal Music Group Inc. affiliate ended its contract with Remy Ma nine months before she shot Makeda Barnes-Joseph outside a Manhattan nightclub./ppThe Grammy Award-nominated rapper was convicted of assault and other charges. She's serving an eight-year prison sentence./ppBarnes-Joseph's lawyer says she's disappointed by the ruling. A lawyer for Remy Ma had no immediate comment. A lawyer for Universal didn't immediately return a call./ppThe appeals court upheld a lower court's decision to dismiss Barnes-Joseph's case against Universal and various affiliates. She also is suing the rapper and the club./p |
|
|
|
|
|
San Francisco law firm seeks dismissal of Thornburg lawsuit
Law News |
2010/05/05 09:00
|
pA San Francisco law firm, which was sued by the bankruptcy trustee in charge of liquidating Thornburg Mortgage, has asked the court to dismiss the lawsuit, calling it long on rhetoric but short on facts./ppThe trustee's lawsuit filed in March named attorney Karen Dempsey of Orrick, Herrington amp; Sutcliffe and the firm itself as part of an alleged conspiracy that involved four top Thornburg executives improperly paying themselves handsome bonuses just before the mortgage lender filed for bankruptcy last year./ppIn court papers filed on Monday, the law firm said the complaint did not show that Dempsy knew about the allegedly improper conduct of the executives./ppUsing novel theories of conspiracy and aiding and abetting, the trustee seeks to impose what would be unprecedented 'vicarious' liability on special counsel for a debtor, the filing said.
/p |
|
|
|
|
|
Novartis defends sex bias accusations at NYC trial
Law News |
2010/04/09 09:44
|
pA lawyer opened a sex discrimination trial Thursday by accusing the U.S. arm of Swiss drug company Novartis of discriminating against 5,600 female sales representatives, saying they are denied promotions and equal pay and sometimes face a hostile workplace./ppAttorney Katherine Kimpel acknowledged to the jury in federal court in Manhattan that the company has extensive written materials warning against discrimination but accused it of saying one thing on paper but another thing in real life./ppShe said women hired since 2002 entered a company that disrespects and undermines its female workers, resulting in lower pay, fewer promotions and sometimes a hostile workplace dominated by an old boys network./ppShe said the discrimination was especially severe for women who became pregnant. Sometimes, she said, they faced managers who fished through their work looking for ways to spoil their careers or pressured them to take shorter leaves or to work while they were on leave./ppNovartis attorney Richard Schnadig said the company does not discriminate against women and there was no glass ceiling./ppThis is a fair, decent, responsive company that has been sensitive to women's' needs, he said. We don't discriminate. ... the company makes no claims that we're perfect./ppSchnadig said 70 percent of its sales managers are men because the demographics of the workplace have not yet recovered from the days when fewer women entered the work force. He said the company has 14,000 U.S. employees with significant numbers of senior positions held by women, some of whom will testify at the trial.
/p |
|
|
|
|