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5 Sep 2012, 2:49 pm by JA Hodnicki
Daniel Sokol Mark Rosman and Jeff VanHooreweghe (Wilson Sonsini) discuss What Goes Up, Doesn’t Come Down: The Absence of the Mitigating-Role Adjustment in Antitrust Sentencing. [read post]
26 Sep 2013, 12:00 am by D Daniel Sokol
ABSTRACT: The Competition Act 2010 and the Competition Commission Act 2010 mark a new beginning for competition law in Malaysia,... [read post]
5 Sep 2012, 2:49 pm by JA Hodnicki
Daniel Sokol Mark Rosman and Jeff VanHooreweghe (Wilson Sonsini) discuss What Goes Up, Doesn’t Come Down: The Absence of the Mitigating-Role Adjustment in Antitrust Sentencing. [read post]
4 Oct 2013, 4:04 am by Paul Caron
The New York Law School Law Review hosts a symposium today on The 100th Anniversary of the Revenue Act of 1913: Marking a Century of Income Tax Law in the United States: On October 3, 1913, President Woodrow Wilson signed into law the Revenue Act of 1913. [read post]
29 Aug 2022, 2:07 pm by Jeralyn
A preliminary look at the documents revealed 184 with classification markings including 67 documents marked “CONFIDENTIAL,” 92 marked “SECRET,” and 25 marked as “TOP SECRET,” the affidavit says. [read post]
26 Nov 2014, 9:47 am
  Wilson testified that, as he was in uniform driving in his marked patrol car, he saw Brown and a companion (later identified as Dorian Johnson) approaching him, walking down the middle of the street. [read post]
10 Nov 2007, 5:37 am
Updating this Nov. 9th ILB entry, Mark Wilson of the Evansville Courier and Press reports today:Evansville attorney Brad Happe, facing two felony counts of methamphetamine-related charges, was found not guilty on all charges at the end of a two-day trial Friday. [read post]
31 Mar 2010, 8:51 am
That's a picture of a transparent memory chip developed by a group of South Korean scientists that Mark Wilson reports on in his December 17, 2008 blog post, Researchers Develop Transparent Memory, See-Through Electronics Next. [read post]
31 Mar 2010, 8:51 am
That's a picture of a transparent memory chip developed by a group of South Korean scientists that Mark Wilson reports on in his December 17, 2008 blog post, Researchers Develop Transparent Memory, See-Through Electronics Next. [read post]