Dude… cough… cough… I got a GREAT idea… cough … cough…
A state trooper found a 6-foot alligator in the back seat of a car during a traffic stop. (video) Guy with dreadlocks, illegal u-turn, alligator in back seat… hmmm…..
A state trooper found a 6-foot alligator in the back seat of a car during a traffic stop. (video) Guy with dreadlocks, illegal u-turn, alligator in back seat… hmmm…..
When I write agreements, I liken them to planning for a lunar mission and a war at the same time. The science of contract drafting requires you to think of
If you are looking for a perfect mix of progressive politics and Red Sox fanaticism, Mr. Furious is just what the shrink ordered. Warning, you may wind up stuck there
My good friend and fellow blawgger, Andrew Contiguglia is based in Denver. (Yeah, you see where this is going…) He had the audacity to send me an instant message this
The Randazza vs. Contiguglia / Red Sox vs. Rockies bet is on! Randazza threw down the gauntlet first. Contiguglia picked it right back up and threw it back, upping the
Some “musician” penned a song called “lick me in the ass“. How inappropriate. I remember when musicians were respectable and wouldn’t dare do something so immoral or scandalous.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYXUUsDGxkU]
Professor Scott Moss of the University of Colorado has a great comment on the Imus defamation suit This is a classic case of a plaintiff who’s justifiably enraged about something
Susan Carter Liebel is a solo practitioner and an adjunct professor at Quinnipiac University School of Law. I stumbled upon her blog this morning and found this posting to be
Sherman, set the wayback machine to Halloween night, 2004. On that evening, Gordon Lee decided to give away 2,000 free comic books to the children of Rome, Georgia. Among those
An interesting trademark/trade-dress case from the District of Utah. Most of the opinion is a relatively dull discussion of trade dress. Here’s the fun part.
New Jersey’s long arm statute seems to have stretched a little too far in this decision. In Goldhaber v. Kohlenberg, the New Jersey Court of Appeals ran through a litany