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CNet to Appeal Court's Bylaw Ruling
U.S. Court News |
2008/03/17 11:02
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CNet Networks Inc. said Monday that it will appeal a lower court's decision on bylaw provisions to the Delaware Supreme Court.pLast week the Delaware Chancery Court ruled that CNet's bylaws do not give it the ability to prevent a group of dissident shareholders led by an affiliate of hedge fund Jana Partners LLC from nominating directors to the company's board or proposing an increase to the board's size./ppThe court's decision incorrectly calls into question the bylaws of a large number of companies with the same or similar bylaw provisions, CNet said in a release. The company said its stockholder-approved bylaws are fully applicable to the hedge fund./ppA costly and disruptive proxy contest is not in the best interest of stockholders, and Jana should not be able to seek control of CNet without paying a premium, the company said./ppIn a letter to CNet Chief Executive Neil Ashe issued earlier Monday, Jana managing partner Barry Rosenstein questioned whether an appeal would benefit shareholders. We believe it is time for fundamental strategic and operational change at CNet, and that the nominees we have proposed... have the collective experience and expertise to successfully implement this change, he wrote./ppJana had about a 10 percent stake in CNET as of Dec. 31./p |
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Lake Stevens to halt drug testing after court ruling
Law Firm News |
2008/03/14 09:22
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Lake Stevens School District plans to suspend student drug testing after the Washington State Supreme Court ruled today that testing of student athletes is unconstitutional.
The district’s lawyer needs to review the court decision, spokeswoman Arlene Hulten said.
“On first blush, it looks like this ruling would impact our programs and we’d have to stop our random drug testing programs for grades 9 to 12,” she said.
Lake Stevens High School is one of the few in the state that uses random drug tests. In a controversial move, the school began testing students involved in extracurricular activities for drugs in 2006.
The tests have helped motivate kids to avoid drugs, Hulten said.
The court unanimously ruled in support of a challenge brought against the Wahkiakum School District's policy of random urine tests of middle school and high school student athletes. |
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Jackson Lawyer: Neverland Auction Off
Legal Line News |
2008/03/14 09:21
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Michael Jackson still has Neverland, having cut an 11th-hour deal Thursday to keep it off the auction block.pBut the magic that once made the financially troubled entertainer's 2,500-acre paradise in the rolling hills of central California's wine country one of the most talked-about places on Earth seems to have vanished along with its reclusive owner./ppJackson hasn't been seen in this bucolic area of oak-studded hills since he was acquitted in June 2005 of molesting a 13-year-old visitor to his estate, and his absence leaves the future of Neverland, a sort of Hearst Castle for 12-year-olds, in doubt./ppWe're all, of course, wondering what's going to happen. We've heard rumors but we don't know anything, said Kim Morrison, one of the administrators of a private school located just across the road from Neverland./p |
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Attorney General To Argue a Case Before High Court
Legal News |
2008/03/13 14:35
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pAttorney General Michael B. Mukasey, who spent most of his adult life as a federal prosecutor and a judge, will return to the courtroom later this month to argue a case before the Supreme Court, officials said yesterday. /ppMukasey will urge the justices to reinstate a sentence overturned by an appeals court in the case of Ahmed Ressam, an al-Qaeda operative convicted of a plot to blow up Los Angeles International Airport in 1999. /ppThe last attorney general to handle a case before the high court was Janet Reno in 1996, court officials said. William P. Barr and Richard Thornburgh also argued cases while serving as attorneys general in the administration of George H.W. Bush. /ppJustice Department spokesman Peter A. Carr said there is a custom, not always followed, for attorneys general to argue at least one Supreme Court case during their term. He declined to comment on why Mukasey chose the Ressam case. /ppMukasey, 66, is a retired federal judge who oversaw several high-profile terrorism-related trials while on the bench in New York City. He is scheduled to appear for Supreme Court arguments on March 25 and plans to conduct moot-court sessions to prepare, officials said. /ppRessam was arrested near the U.S.-Canada border in December 1999 after customs agents found 124 pounds of explosives in the trunk of his car as he disembarked from a ferry in Port Angeles, Wash. He was convicted in 2001 of nine charges in connection with the plot, but after ceasing cooperation with the FBI was sentenced to 22 years in prison in 2005. /ppThe U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit threw out the sentence in 2007 after finding that one of the charges was applied improperly. The federal government disagrees and wants the sentence reinstated.
/p |
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