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Legal Ethics News

May 16, 2012

Marathon Pundit | May 16, 2012
US Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN)--who I've been tough on in the past as you will read here--criticized lawyers who work on asbestos cases at a hearing of the House Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Courts, Commercial and Administrative Law last week.
Illinois Review | May 16, 2012
A recent Harris Interactive survey finds Illinois ranked as having one of the worst legal climates (45th out of 50) in the country — and a big reasons is Madison County, IL, which has a national reputation as a haven for asbestos lawsuits.

May 15, 2012

American Lawyer | May 15, 2012
Given U.S. District Judge Richard Kaplan's previous rulings in Chevron's racketeering case against plaintiffs lawyer Steven Donziger and others, it would have been a surprise if the judge granted a motion by Donziger's lawyers at Keker & Van Nest to dismiss the case outright. And indeed, on Monday Kaplan refused to throw out the case--though he did toss related claims of fraud and tortious interference.
Wall Street Journal | May 15, 2012
A federal judge narrowed Chevron Corp.'s claims in its racketeering lawsuit against a lawyer involved in long-running environmental litigation against the company.

May 14, 2012

Wall Street Journal | May 14, 2012
Chevron Corporation went to U.S. federal court in Miami on May 4 seeking the records of eight accounts at Banco Pichincha in Ecuador. The oil company maintains that these records could prove that an Ecuadorean geological engineer, who was hired by the court to be an independent expert in the case of Maria Aguinda y Otros vs. Chevron, was bribed by plaintiffs lawyers. Both the expert and the plaintiffs lawyers deny the charge.
Cincinnati Enquirer | May 14, 2012
The Kentucky Supreme Court will hear an appeal from a group of people sickened by the diet-drug fen-phen who say that a $42 million judgment awarded to them from their one-time attorneys should be reinstated.

May 9, 2012

Wall Street Journal Law Blog | May 9, 2012
New fraud charges have been added to the criminal case against a former part-owner of a New York litigation funding firm arrested in March in a kickback scheme that allegedly defrauded his former business partners out of about $1 million.
The Foundry | May 9, 2012
Lawsuits against oil and gas companies in Louisiana have taken a toll on the industry and the state’s economy generally. But documents obtained by Scribe suggest plaintiffs’ attorneys in the lawsuits seek out litigation even when they know their claims are baseless.
Sacramento Bee | May 9, 2012
California has long struggled to find the right balance between making sure the disabled have access to public places and protecting businesses from burdensome lawsuits. After lengthy negotiations, advocates for the disabled, trial attorneys and business groups came up with a compromise that took effect in January 2009. It created ground rules to allow businesses to be certified by the state as being in compliance.

May 7, 2012

New York Times | May 7, 2012
For other arguments against class actions, the Haggler spoke to a representative at the United States Chamber of Commerce’s Institute for Legal Reform, which is a big fan of the Concepcion decision. Matt Webb, a senior vice president of the organization, says the class-action system is flawed because it is designed by and for lawyers. Arbitration, he added, can work.