Vatican Set to Roll Out Defenses in Sex-Abuse Case – Law Blog – WSJ

The Catholic Church has been dealing with its sex-abuse problems for decades. In that span, thousands of lawsuits have been filed, and millions upon millions have been paid out to victims.

But lawsuits filed against the Vatican have been few and far between. The vast majority of the litigation has been aimed at individual priests, bishops and dioceses.

With that as a backdrop, let’s give you the news: The Vatican itself is soon due to defend itself in U.S. court, after failing to thwart a lawsuit claiming it ordered American bishops to cover up evidence of child sex abuse. In court filings expected next week, the Vatican likely will provide the most comprehensive look yet at how it plans to defend itself against the accusations. Click here for our story in Friday’s WSJ.

The original accusations against the Vatican stem from a 2004 suit in Louisville, Ky., on behalf of three men who said they were sexually abused by Catholic priests in Kentucky when they were children.

The suit claims the Vatican instructed bishops in the U.S. to keep quiet when confronted with evidence or allegations that priests had abused children. That policy, the suit claims, helped foster a culture in which sex abuse was tolerated.

Jeffrey Lena, the lawyer for the Holy See, said, he would offer expert testimony that a pivotal 1962 Vatican document, called Crimen Sollicitationis, never barred reporting sexual abuse to civil authorities. The plaintiffs have alleged that the document instructed bishops to keep quiet when told of alleged sex abuse.

via Vatican Set to Roll Out Defenses in Sex-Abuse Case – Law Blog – WSJ.

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Sprint 4G: The Home Broadband Alternative? – PCWorld

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In addition to being a pretty cool phone with all the latest bells and whistles, the HTC Evo 4G has one very unique attribute: It’s the first U.S. handset designed for 4G (fourth generation) mobile broadband networks.

Sprint says its 4G WiMax network, a partnership between the wireless carrier and its broadband partner Clearwire, is up to 10 times faster than today’s 3G speeds. That translates into download speeds of up to 6 megabits per second (Mbps), although performance will vary by location.

PC World‘s Mark Sullivan, who tested the Sprint/Clearwire network in Las Vegas in March, saw download rates ranging from a blistering 11 Mbps to 13 Mbps at the high end, to a not-too-shabby 2 Mbps at the low end. At those speeds, WiMax is a viable alternative to today’s home broadband offerings, including DSL, cable, and fiber (e.g., FiOS).

Sprint sees a potential market there too. “We see Sprint 4G as a tremendous opportunity for customers who are interested in choosing a wireless solution over Cable/DSL/fiber,” company spokesman Mark Elliott told me recently. The company’s 4G service is currently available in 32 U.S. markets, and Sprint hopes to reach 120 million people by end of 2010.

via Sprint 4G: The Home Broadband Alternative? – PCWorld.

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SEC’s CDO Cross-hairs: Now Morgan Stanley…Who’s Next? | Westlaw Business

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With Morgan Stanley now joining Goldman in its cross-hairs, the SEC is taking aim at synthetic collateralized debt obligation (CDO) activity across Wall Street. It was the Street’s version of fantasy football, played by banks from Merrill to Morgan, with much money and little disclosure (according to the Commission). Other parties and enforcement agencies are now playing pile-up as well, with Federal prosecutors in Manhattan and even AIG jumping into the fray – yet the question is on what grounds…

The hunt for inadequate disclosure is spreading wide on Wall Street. Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, JPMorgan, UBS, and Deutsche Bank are all reportedly under investigation for their roles in synthetic CDO transactions. On the surface the allegations seem substantially similar to the SEC charges filed against Goldman Sachs last month.

The Goldman charges focus on allegedly inadequate disclosure of conflicts of interest related to the structuring of ABACUS 2007-AC1, another synthetic CDO. Like fantasy football teams, these securities were built from whatever “referenced assets” the bank desired — giving them more power, and understanding, than usual, and arguably mandating more disclosure as a result.

via SEC’s CDO Cross-hairs: Now Morgan Stanley…Who’s Next?.

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Transocean Asks to Cap Rig Liability at $26.7 Million – BusinessWeek

Transocean Ltd., the owner and operator of the oil rig leased to BP Plc which exploded last month and killed 11 men, has asked a U.S. judge to limit its liability to $26.7 million.

The request, filed today in Houston federal court under a 150-year-old law originally designed for the shipping industry, applies to all litigation the company faces over the explosion and spill.

“I think there are more than 100 cases now,’’ Guy Cantwell, Transocean’s spokesman, said in a telephone interview.

Transocean and co-owners of the Deepwater Horizon, which now lies wrecked a mile deep in the Gulf of Mexico, say the state-of-the-art drilling rig has zero present value and had accrued $26.7 million in unpaid drilling rental fees.

The company also asked for all litigation against the rig owners to be consolidated before one federal judge in Houston, where Transocean’s U.S. operations are based. Vernier, Switzerland-based Transocean said it would create a court- administered fund, equal to the amount of the unpaid drilling fees, from which all claims against the company could be paid on a pro-rata basis.

Lawyers for victims of the rig disaster and spill said that while Transocean’s move to limit its liability probably wouldn’t succeed, it could cause the oil spill litigation to be consolidated into a single multidistrict proceeding in Houston federal court, as BP has also requested.

via Transocean Asks to Cap Rig Liability at $26.7 Million (Update3) – BusinessWeek.

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Know the Rules for Tech-Based Evidence | The Recorder

Technology-based evidence is subject to the same evidentiary hurdles as traditional demonstrative evidence. Different evidentiary rules are implicated depending on whether the evidence itself is electronic or whether technological means are used to display non-electronic evidence. If the underlying evidence is a hard copy, such as a photograph, then there are no impediments to use technology to display the evidence as long as a proper foundation has been laid.

Demonstrative technology-based evidence is as admissible as the evidence it seeks to illustrate. Visual evidence can be used to illustrate a witness' testimony if it will help the jury understand the testimony and it is a fair representation of the evidence it purports to illustrate. United States v. Mohney, 949 F.2d 1397, 1405 (6th Cir. 1991). Thus, accurate computer-generated models or diagrams can be used to illustrate a witness's testimony. United States v. Beckford, 211 F.3d 1266 (4th Cir. 2000). (Beckford allows computer-generated diagrams as a demonstrative aid to help illustrate investigative findings concerning observations of bullets, bullet holes, and bullet path angles.)

Where computer animations are used to illustrate a witness's testimony, the jury should be instructed that the simulation is not a reenactment of the event. Hinkle v. City of Clarksburg, WV, 81 F.3d 416, 427 (4th Cir. 1996); Datskow v. Teledyne Continental Motors Aircraft Products, a Div. of Teledyne Indus., Inc. 826 F.Supp. 677, 685–686 (WD NY 1993) (Here, the court instructed the jury that computer-generated animation of fire in an airplane engine was “simply computer pictures” to help them understand [the expert's] opinion.) The proper foundation for such evidence is established by demonstrating that the demonstrative evidence is a fair representation of the underlying admitted evidence. People v. Ham, 7 Cal.App.3d 768, 780 (1970). Ultimately, the court has discretion to exclude this evidence if it believes that the probative value is outweighed by the risks of juror confusion. California Evidence Code §352.

It cannot be stressed enough that the technology-based demonstrative aids accurately reflect the testimony — since this is the most likely ground for exclusion.

If one is using computer output as the substantive evidence rather than to simply illustrate the expert's testimony, there are greater implications for admitting the evidence. In Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 589 (1993), the Supreme Court interpreted Federal Rule of Evidence 702. Here, the court said that “under the Rules the trial judge must ensure that any and all scientific testimony or evidence is not only relevant, but reliable.” Daubert focuses on objective criteria that may provide a safeguard against the admission of evidence that has customarily been received, but may not have a scientific basis.

The factors laid out in Daubert that are used for determining whether a technique is scientific knowledge that will assist the trier of fact are: 1) whether it can be (and has been) tested; 2) whether the theory or technique has been subjected to peer review and publication; 3) the known or potential rate of error in the case of a particular scientific technique; and 4) general acceptance. The court further stated that “[t]he inquiry envisioned by Rule 702, we emphasize, is a flexible one. Its overarching subject is the scientific validity and thus the evidentiary relevance and reliability of the principles that underlie a proposed submission.”

Sections 720 and 801 of the California Evidence Code are equivalent to Federal Rule 702. See People v. Leahy, 8 Cal.4th 587, 598 (1994) (“Sections 720 and 801, in combination, seem the functional equivalent of Federal Rules of Evidence, rule 702, as discussed in Daubert.”). Under §801 and the Kelly/Frye test, the admissibility of the evidence will turn on whether it is “generally accepted by experts in the field.”

Opposing counsel may argue that the evidence, though relevant, should be excluded because it poses a high risk of unfair prejudice under Federal Rules of Evidence Section 403 or California Evidence Code §352. As a result, it is advisable to have the judge pre-rule on the admissibility of graphic-animation evidence. The court will weigh the probative value or logical force of the evidence and compare it to any number of dangers or costs that might be created if the evidence is admitted, such as unfair prejudice or misleading the jury.

Strategically, the most prevalent use of demonstrative evidence is through expert testimony, which if properly presented can substantially enhance the expert's credibility before the jury. For reconstructions of an accident or event in dispute, the reconstruction needs to be made under “substantially similar” conditions to those existing at the time of the event. People v. Boyd, 222 Cal.App.3d 541, 565-66 (1990); Grimshaw v. Ford Motor Co., 119 Cal.App.3d 757, 791 (1981). In all circumstances, when there is any doubt regarding the admissibility of the evidence, the litigator should obtain a pre-ruling from the court regarding the admissibility of the demonstrative evidence.

Technology-based demonstrative evidence is now universally recognized as an indispensable tool for litigators in the modern age. Just like everything else in trial, the key to the use of technology-based demonstrative evidence is preparation, preparation, preparation.

via Law.com – Know the Rules for Tech-Based Evidence.

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Microsoft Dealt Major Setback Over $290 Million Infringement Judgment | National Law Journal

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The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office‘s recent confirmation of the validity of a patent that netted i4i Limited Partnership a $290 million infringement judgment against Microsoft Corp. means the U.S. Supreme Court is likely Microsoft’s last hope to overturn the judgment.

On Tuesday, i4i announced that the PTO affirmed the patentability of all the claims in its patent for processing and storing information about electronic documents’ structure. In its lawsuit, i4i claimed that Microsoft Word 2007 infringed that patent, and Microsoft had requested a re-examination in the hopes that the PTO would declare the patent invalid. The PTO has yet to issue a formal certificate confirming the patent’s validity, but the agency informed Canadian software company i4i of its notice of intent to issue an ex parte re-examination certificate on April 28.

In an e-mailed statement, Kevin Kutz, Microsoft’s director of public affairs, said that while the company is disappointed, “there still remain important matters of patent law at stake, and we are considering our options to get them addressed, including a petition to the Supreme Court.”

Microsoft’s bid to use its request for a patent office re-examination of i4i’s patent “has failed in a dramatic way,” said i4i’s lawyer for the re-examination, Rob Greene Sterne, founder of Washington-based Sterne, Kessler, Goldstein & Fox.

Microsoft filed its PTO re-examination request before the jury verdict but well into the lawsuit, probably as a backup plan in case it lost the lawsuit, Sterne said. “Microsoft, I’m sure, assumed that they would win the re-exam or create significant difficulties for i4i in the re-exam that would drive a better settlement,” he said.

Lawyers say that unless Microsoft finds grounds for a motion for relief from judgment, such as newly discovered evidence or fraud, the U.S. Supreme Court is its last avenue.

Microsoft is “pretty much at the end of their line” unless the Supreme Court takes its case as one of the handful of patent matters the Court hears each year, said Thomas Engellenner, the co-chair of the patent practice group at Boston’s Nutter, McClennen & Fish. Engellenner wasn’t involved in the case.

via Law.com – Microsoft Dealt Major Setback Over $290 Million Infringement Judgment.

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Toyota delayed almost a year before issuing 2005 steering defect recall – USATODAY.com

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Toyota waited 11 months after recalling trucks in Japan for a steering defect before it recalled nearly 1 million of them in the U.S., and safety officials now want to know why the delay.

The U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said Monday afternoon it had begun an investigation into the 11-month gap between a recall in Japan in October 2004 and one in the U.S. of 977,839 similar vehicles in September 2005.

NHTSA says it has reports of three deaths and seven injuries from the faulty steering rods on 4Runner SUVs and T100 and Hi Lux compact pickups, spanning 1989 to 1998 models, that triggered the recalls. It could not immediately determine, however, if those injuries and deaths occured during the 11 month delay, or some other time.

Toyota says it will coooperate with NHTSA’s investigation.

The new allegations of foot-dragging could deal “another severe blow” to Toyota’s “already fragile consumer trust,”says Jesse Toprak, vice president of industry trends at auto-industry reasearcher TrueCar.com.

via Toyota delayed almost a year before issuing 2005 steering defect recall – USATODAY.com.

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Legal Documents Reveal AT&T Has Exclusive IPhone Rights Until 2012 | DailyTech

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Those who follow the smartphone industry knew that Apple and AT&T had a very tight contract with the iPhone which has compelled the electronics maker to stay AT&T exclusive to date.  However, it was unclear just how long that contract was good for, until now. According to unsealed court documents, AT&T has exclusive rights to sell the iPhone in the U.S. until 2012.

The documents come from a California antitrust class action lawsuit.  The plaintiffs claim that Apple attempted to create an illegal monopoly in 2007 when it failed to reveal that the secret deal would make it impossible for them to transfer their phones to other carriers in 2 years, without unlocking.

The case also accuses Apple of antitrust violations for blocking third party applications, a concern that still exists thanks to Apple’s blocking of Flash and Flash ports, actions the U.S. Federal Trade Commission is currently examining for antitrust violations.

via DailyTech – Legal Documents Reveal AT&T Has Exclusive IPhone Rights Until 2012.

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Global Disclosures: Litigation Risk | Westlaw Business Currents

For most U.S. trained attorneys, it probably doesn’t come as a surprise that even the mere possibility of litigation should be disclosed somewhere in a company’s annual report. But for attorneys preparing an annual report for a foreign filer from a less litigious country – basically every other country – take note this 20F/40F season: Companies are erring on the side of conservatism when it comes to litigation risk. Companies from camera manufacturer Canon to mobile phone manufacturer Ericsson to Norwegian oil company Statoil are disclosing risks ranging from IP litigation to uncertainty in certain target markets, to dealing with wrongful termination allegations. While litigation disclosures are certainly not one-size fits all, below are a few of the themes rising up through this 20F/40F filing season.

General litigation risk disclosures come in every shape and size, but a pretty standard example comes from Italian oil and natural gas company Eni SpA. In their recent 20F, however, they stated that lawsuits are an ordinary occurrence in their line of business. A similar disclosure appears in the recent annual report from Newfoundland-based Canadian mineral royalty company Terra Nova Royalty Corp.

And although materiality should play a factor in determining whether to disclose, every lawsuit should be reviewed to determine the potential impact. A prime example is British Columbia, Canada-based Chai Na Ta’s recent admission that the company became involved in a lawsuit related to an automobile accident. Although the company believes that insurance will fully indemnify the company, the disclosure serves as an example that no rock should remain unturned in the quest for transparency. Likewise, Norwegian Statoil discusses in detail two lawsuits, one of which explicitly states the financial impact is immaterial.

via Global Disclosures: Litigation Risk.

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Lawyers Vie For Lead Roles in Toyota Suits | Orange County Business Journal

Mark Robinson of Newport Beach’s Robinson, Calcagnie & Robinson Inc. and Wylie Aitken of Santa Ana’s Aitken Aitken Cohn are among those seeking to lead Toyota litigation being consolidated in Santa Ana.

Federal Judge James Selna on Thursday is expected to select a committee of lawyers to lead suits against Toyota’s U.S. arm in Torrance. He’s expected to pick from more than 100 lawyers vying for an expected five lead spots. More than a dozen other lawyers are set to be tapped for supporting roles.

“This is obviously going to be a very major case involving a tremendous amount of legal talent,” said Aitken, founder of Aitken Aitken Cohn.

At stake is a pot of money estimated at $200 million to $500 million in lawyers fees that would be split among the lead and supporting lawyers.

Robinson, senior partner at Robinson, Calcagnie & Robinson, has applied to lead personal injury litigation against Toyota. He and other lawyers submitted their bids last month.

Judge Selna has “given criteria in his order and a lot of people have applied,” Robinson said. “We’ll see what happens.”

Aitken has applied to lead litigation related to the economic impact of Toyota’s recalls. Lawsuits there charge that Toyota vehicles lost value for owners and dealers after recall.

via Lawyers Vie For Lead Roles in Toyota Suits | Orange County Business Journal.

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