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World Court to rule on US executions
Legal World News | 2008/07/16 12:54
The U.N.'s highest court is ruling Wednesday on an emergency Mexican appeal to block the execution of its citizens on death row in the United States.

At hastily convened hearings last month, Mexico argued that the United States is defying a 2004 International Court of Justice order to review the cases of 51 Mexicans sentenced to death by state courts.

That order was based on the Hague-based court's finding that the condemned prisoners had been denied the right to help from their consulate following their arrest.

Wednesday's ruling comes less than three weeks before the first of the death row inmates, Jose Medellin, is scheduled for execution by lethal injection in Texas for taking part in the gang rape and murder of two teenage girls 15 years ago.

At last month's hearings, Mexico's chief advocate Juan Manuel Gomez-Robledo told the court the cases had not been systematically reviewed, and the U.S. was "in breach of its international obligations."

John B. Bellinger III, the U.S. legal adviser, said federal government had gone to "extraordinary lengths" to carry out the World Court's directive and to intercede with the state courts.

After the World Court's ruling, President George W. Bush issued a directive to the state courts to abide by the decision and also asked Texas specifically to review Medellin's case ahead of his planned Aug. 5 execution.



SEC settles two lawsuits against Coppell man
Headline News | 2008/07/16 10:58

The Securities and Exchange Commission settled two civil lawsuits Tuesday against a North Texas stock promoter allegedly involved in so-called pump-and-dump market manipulation scams.

One suit is still pending against five other people and one company.

The complaints allege that Coppell accountant Mark B. Lindberg, 40, helped market a series of penny stocks and, along with other defendants, reaped millions of dollars by releasing false information to pump up the share price.

In settling the cases, Mr. Lindberg neither admitted nor denied the allegations. He has agreed to a permanent injunction and is barred from being an officer or director. He also agreed to not be involved in penny stocks.

The initial suit involves an Irving company called Sniffex that Mr. Lindberg helped take public.

The company, which marketed a bomb detection device, is now called Homeland Safety International Inc. and was controlled primarily by two Bulgarians.

The complaint also names president Paul B. Johnson of Colleyville, who could not be reached for comment Tuesday, and two investors from Denmark. The suit still seeks penalties against the defendants other than Mr. Lindberg.



Appeals court upholds $15M award to LAPD officers
Lawyer Blog News | 2008/07/15 16:41
A federal appeals court on Monday upheld a $15 million award to three officers who accused the Los Angeles Police Department of wrongly arresting them and making them scapegoats during the notorious Rampart scandal.

The massive corruption scandal led to the investigation of 82 incidents involving 50 officers and reversal of more than 100 convictions tainted by police misconduct.

A jury in 2006 determined that the three men were each entitled to $5 million because they were wrongly arrested and charged with filing false police reports.

The three were implicated by former officer Rafael Perez, the central figure of the scandal in which officers were alleged to have beaten, robbed, framed and shot innocent people in the city's tough Rampart neighborhood. Dozens of officers were investigated, leading to some resignations and internal discipline, but only a small number of prosecutions.

Perez told investigators that the three men — Paul Harper, Edward Ortiz and Brian Liddy — had lied about finding a gun on a gang suspect during a 1996 arrest.

Harper and Ortiz are still with the department, but Liddy has left, according Officer Karen Smith, a LAPD spokeswoman.

The 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in its decision Monday noted that on three different occasions Perez gave investigators significantly divergent accounts of what allegedly happened during the arrest, including the inaccurate detail that a music sound system had to be dismantled at the arrest scene.

A state court jury did convict the three men in 2000 of conspiracy to obstruct justice in the framing of two reputed gang members. A Superior Court judge threw out the convictions a month later, citing faulty jury instructions.

Prosecutors decided not to pursue the case, and a judge dismissed the charges in 2004.



NC State coach Lowe's son pleads guilty in robbery
Court Feed News | 2008/07/15 13:41
The son of North Carolina State basketball coach Sidney Lowe pleaded guilty on Monday to dozens of charges connected to a March 2007 armed robbery.

A sentencing hearing for Sidney Lowe II began Monday and is expected to end Tuesday in Guilford County Superior Court.

Defense lawyer Joe Cheshire said his client was "completely remorseful."

Lowe entered guilty pleas to six counts each of robbery with a dangerous weapon and kidnapping, possession of a weapon on educational property, possession with intent to sell and deliver marijuana and possession of ecstasy under a plea agreement.

The 23-year-old Lowe also entered a plea to a conspiracy to commit armed robbery charge from a shooting at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. The plea means he doesn't admit guilt but says the state has enough evidence to convict him.



Law Firm Urges SEC To Be Aggressive In Attacking Rumors
Headline News | 2008/07/15 12:43

U.S. securities regulators need to be more aggressive in attacking manipulative rumor-mongering and short selling abuses, a prominent New York law firm said Monday.

In a memo to clients, Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz urged the Securities and Exchange Commission to conduct a 45-day study of the extent to which "abusive and manipulative short-selling and spreading of false rumors is taking place," and to issue a public report on its findings.

The law firm also called for the SEC to adopt rules as appropriate in response to its findings, and to bring enforcement actions against wrongdoers, coordinating efforts with criminal prosecutors where necessary.

Wachtell, Lipton's call to arms came one day after an unusual Sunday announcement from the SEC that it plans to begin immediate examinations into controls at brokerage firms, mutual funds, money management companies and hedge funds to prevent the deliberate spreading of false rumors to manipulate stock prices.

The SEC's examination into industry practices came after a rocky week of trading and concerns about the outlook for federal housing-finance giants Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) and for commercial and investment banks, including Lehman Brothers Inc. (LEH).

"While this is an important first step, the SEC needs to undertake additional bold measures to constrain abusive short-selling and rumor-mongering," according to the memo, signed by Wachtell, Lipton partners Edward Herlihy and Theodore Levine. The two recently urged the SEC to bring back restrictions on short sales when stock prices are declining, recommending a return to so-called "tick test" that forbade short sales when markets are ticking down.

SEC spokesman John Nester declined to comment.

Wachtell, Lipton is a leading advisor in corporate mergers, including the acquisition of Bear Stearns Cos. by JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM). Some former Bear executives have blamed the firm's collapse on market manipulation by short sellers and JPMorgan Chase Chief Executive Jamie Dimon recently said that the SEC should investigate whether Bear was brought down by a smear campaign.

Short sellers sell borrow shares in hopes of replacing them later at a lower price, profiting when the stock declines. While the practice is legal, critics say regulators have been ineffective in curbing abusive, manipulative short selling.



Court rules for NY Times in anthrax libel case
Court Feed News | 2008/07/15 10:41
A federal appeals court has ruled against a former Army scientist who sued The New York Times over columns linking him to deadly 2001 anthrax attacks.

A three-judge panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Monday that Steven Hatfill was a public figure and had to prove actual malice to win his libel lawsuit. The court said Hatfill failed to meet that burden.

Five people were killed and 17 sickened in the anthrax attacks. Then-Attorney General John Ashcroft publicly identified Hatfill as a "person of interest" in the investigation.

Columnist Nicholas Kristof criticized the FBI's investigation as lackadaisical and initially referred to Hatfill as "Mr. Z." Kristof identified Hatfill by name only after Hatfill held a news conference to denounce rumors.



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