- Fumento on the absurd reporting of the Toyota sudden acceleration NHTSA investigation. [Fumento]
- More sins of omission in US v. Arizona. [Mac Donald @ Corner; earlier]
- E.D.N.Y. refuses to dismiss class action alleging that VitaminWater doesn't do enough to disclose, well, something that it already discloses. [Jackson]
- "Stock-Option Backdating Cases Reflect Costs Of Overcriminalization" [Hody & Kwedar @ WLF]
- Al Gore innocent, though the details of why are less likely to make headlines or late-night talk show monologues than the false allegations that dragged him through the mud. [Portland DA memo @ WaPo]
- Oops. Federal dietary guidelines often wrong in hindsight. Cf. Woody Allen, Sleeper. [Malanga @ City Journal]
Around the web, August 3
Related Entries:
- Prospective injunctive relief class actions and McNair v. Synapse Group Inc.
- Apple iPhone 4 bumper class action settlement
- New statute would make state witness tampering a federal crime
- Bader on the Theodore Urban case
- Paul Larkin on the STOCK Act
- Around the web, March 13
- Plaintiffs' lawyers protect their cartel by bringing antitrust suit
- Reflection on the criminal law scholarship of William Stuntz
- $2.7 billion nanny-state regulation
- Supreme Court hears argument on Stolen Valor Act
- Apple class actions
- 0.1% claim rate in "successful" class action
- Around the web, February 21
- Distinguishing between the "public corruption amendment" and fighting public corruption
- Bill introduced to de-criminalize the Lacey Act
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| Isaac Gorodetski Project Manager, Center for Legal Policy at the Manhattan Institute igorodetski@manhattan-institute.org |
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| Laura Eyi Press Officer, Manhattan Institute leyi@manhattan-institute.org |



