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Caylee's mom leaves revolving-door jail
Helicopters buzzed overhead and a crowd gathered as a lawyer and two bodyguards escorted Casey Anthony out of a Florida jail for the second time in 15 days. Anthony is considered a "person of interest" in the disappearance of daughter, Caylee, 3.

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Wash. rampage suspect in court: 'I kill for God' (AP)

Isaac Zamora's feet and hands are shackled as he appears in Skagit County district court Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2008, in Mount Vernon, Wash. Zamora is accused in a shooting and stabbing rampage Tuesday that left six people dead and four wounded. Judge David Svaren prohibited photographers from showing Zamora's face during his brief appearance. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)AP - "I kill for God. I listen to God," a man accused of a northwest Washington shooting rampage said Friday at a hearing where six charges of first-degree murder and four of first-degree assault were filed against him.



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CNN Law
Priest accused of lying in mob investigation
Read full story for latest details.



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Forbes.com: Legal and Tax News and Information for Entrepreneurs and Small Businesses Forbes.com: Legal and Tax News and Information for Entrepreneurs and Small Businesses
A Legal Alternative To Online Gambling
Centsports.com lets you place bets with someone else's money. Better yet, you can't lose.

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Law.com - Small Firm Business Law.com - Small Firm Business
IP Boutique Takes Two-Office Strategy
With competition for skilled IP lawyers as keen as ever, one Silicon Valley patent prosecution boutique hopes expanding to San Francisco will give it a leg up. Bozicevic, Field & Francis opened a small office in the city earlier this month. "We could expand on the Peninsula, but we'd be pulling from the same pool of professionals who live on the Peninsula or commute here," says partner Carol Francis, who will head the new branch. "I think more and more people would love to work closer to where they live."

ABC News: The Law ABC News: The Law
Capitol Cops Arrest Man for Weapons Cache
Grenade-type IED, guns, ammunition, knife found in vehicle near U.S. Capitol.

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Legal Blog Watch Legal Blog Watch
Finding Out More About FindLaw's Link Sales
Two weeks ago, I posted on an emerging story reported on various blogs that FindLaw was using paid links to game Google and earn better search engine placement for customers, some of whom paid as much as $1,000 for a...

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Law.com - Large Law Firm Law.com - Large Law Firm
Legal Pad Legal Pad
State Farm v. Scruggs updates (Introduction)

With former super-lawyer Richard F. “Dickie” Scruggs now serving a federal prison term for conspiring to bribe one state judge, and a federal grand jury reportedly looking into whether he conspired to bribe a second one (see also here), State Farm’s lawyers have been relentlessly pursuing a parallel crusade to expose and civilly punish Scruggs for a long laundry list of other alleged wrongdoing.

State Farm’s accusations stem from how Scruggs allegedly conducted his last great litigation campaign, in which he accused State Farm and other insurers of improper claims-handling practices along the Mississippi Gulf coast in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. (Scruggs’s bribery conviction stems from an attempt to influence a lawsuit peripheral to that campaign. in which co-counsel were arguing over how to divvy up attorneys fees.)

My best effort to untangle Scruggs’s assault upon the insurers – which often seemed like a 15-ring circus — was contained in this feature story I wrote for Fortune in April.

But lots has happened since then, particularly over the last two months when I and, probably you, were on vacation. You may have already seen references to some of these developments — including two new depositions from two colleagues and social friends of the State Farm “insiders” who worked with Scruggs, Kerri and Cori Rigsbys –  on the invaluable Yall Politics and Insurance Coverage Blog sites, but I will try here to put that new evidence in some context, add some original reporting, and mention a few things that look important to me that haven’t been noted yet.

Since Internet publishing solons keep telling me that nobody reads more than 700 words at a stretch on the Web (a devastatingly ominous message for someone who does what I do for a living), I’ll try to break this update into palatable, bite-sized pieces, each dealing with a different issue.

In overview, in the unsettled remnants of the suits against State Farm that were originally brought by Scruggs (now being handled by other counsel, obviously), State Farm now alleges that Scruggs manufactured portions of his case against State Farm; induced State Farm insiders to violate their contractual duties; illegally broke into State Farm’s password-protected computer database; tampered with his own witnesses’ or clients’ computers to destroy evidence; compensated witnesses in unethical ways; violated one court’s injunction; and violated another court’s confidentiality orders.

Scruggs’s criminal counsel, John Keker, declined comment for this article, and Scruggs himself invoked his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent when asked about State Farm’s accusations at a civil deposition in July. (He also invoked the Fifth when asked for his date of birth, so his assertions of privilege in this context really should not be seen as admissions to the specific allegations State Farm is making.)

While one judge has already found Scruggs in civil contempt for violating an injunction (a ruling now on appeal) and another has found that he did, in fact, compensate witnesses unethically, most of State Farm’s other accusations remain far from proven.

I’ve broken this update into these six topics:

Part I: Key witness will finally testify

Part II: When Kerri met Dickie

Part III: Was there a third insider?

Part IV: Computer funny business

Part V: “Trailer Lawyers”

Part VI: Violating confidentiality orders


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