Genie Tyburski via Tom Mighell passes along this AskSam website that provides a well-categorized database of the opinions of U.S. Supreme Court nominee, D.C. Circuit Judge John G. Roberts (prior posts here).
By the way, Tom is the grand-daddy of Texas blawgers and his legal research and technology blog — InterAlia — reached its three year milestone this past week. Tom’s blog is a phenomenal resource for anyone involved or interested in legal research, and Tom is one of the pioneers in redefining the way in which high-quality, specialized information is delivered to large numbers of people through the blawgosphere. Congratulations to Tom for a job well done and keep up the good work!
By the way II, in case you missed it on television, go over to the Comedy Central website, scroll down and watch the “Judge Report” video clip from the Daily Show, in which Jon Stewart cleverly excoriates the NARAL over its now infamous ad against Judge Roberts. It’s absolutely hilarious.
Daily Archives: August 21, 2005
Posner v. the Media
Three weeks ago, 7th Circuit Judge Richard Posner (prior posts here) penned this “review” of eight books on the media in the NY Times Review of Books. “Review” is in parenthesis because the piece was not so much a review of the eight books as a forum for Judge Posner to pass along his always entertaining views, this time on the media in America. Among his many observations, Judge Posner discounted the ability of even conscientious reporters and editors to put their personal beliefs aside to generate fair and honest journalism.
Well, in an interesting development, New York Times executive editor Bill Keller has written this Letter to the Editor (scroll down to the second letter) of his own newspaper in which he harshly criticizes Judge Posner’s article on the media as, among other things, “tendentious and cynical.” Bill Moyers and Eric Alterman also chime in. Finally, Dean Velvel provides this more extensive analysis on Judge Posner’s article, and Professor Ribstein has an interesting view of the journalists’ protective reaction to Judge Posner’s criticism.
I look forward to Judge Posner’s response, which will probably be published here.
Mark Lanier’s next case?
This BBC article indicates that none other than Steve Jobs may be the next executive to be on the receiving end of the tort liability merry-go-round:
The surge in sales of iPods and other portable music players in recent years could mean many more people will develop hearing loss, experts fear.
Mark Lanier is licking his chops.
Piling on KPMG
As KPMG attempts to finalize a deferred prosectution agreement with federal prosecutors that would avoid an Arthur Andersen-type indictment and probable meltdown, now they have another front on the criminal battlefield to be worried about:
Mississippi likely will file criminal charges against accounting giant KPMG because it created a tax strategy the state says illegally let WorldCom, now called MCI Inc. shield billions of dollars from taxes, sources close to the case said on Friday.
Although a few other states have also weighed this strategy, Mississippi Attorney General Jim Hood is the most determined and his state would be the first to take this step, said the sources, who requested anonymity.
Under Mississippi law, “any person who willfully attempts in any manner to evade or defeat any tax . . . or assists in the evading of that tax or payment thereof” can be found guilty of a felony, one of the sources said. Penalties can be up to five years in prison, while fines can be as much as $500,000.
Analysts say Congress and corporate America would not want another of the nation’s biggest accounting firms put out of business because the industry would be overly concentrated.
Mississippi might not share the federal government’s concern that there could be too few auditors if KPMG collapsed, experts said, so KPMG might have less leverage in any talks with the state.
Hat tip to Ellen Podgor for the link to the Mississippi action.