September 12, 2007  nº 539  -  Vol. 5  
 

“Amor Fati – “Love Your Fate”, which is in fact your life.”

Friedrich Nietzsche 



In today's Grammatigalhas, a law student asks: "can you give me a primer on the American legal system to help with my research?" We like to oblige!

  • Top News

Japanese Prime Minister Steps Down

Shinzo Abe announced Wednesday he will resign as Japanese prime minister, as his weak leadership and declining popularity made his position untenable. The decision to resign came six weeks after his Liberal Democratic Party was heavily defeated in an upper house election, and his ruling coalition lost control of that chamber, making it impossible to govern effectively. His support rating had fallen to 30%. The first hurdle was the renewal of a law allowing Japan to provide military assistance to U.S.-led forces in Afghanistan. The opposition Democratic Party of Japan said it would vote this down in the upper house, making it hard for Japan to continue the operations and play an active role in its military alliance with the U.S. But even if  Abe had found a way around this, it would have been difficult to carry out other legislation he had been considering, such as farm reform and financial deregulation.

Clinton Returns Money, Sets Precedent 

In returning $850,000 to donors associated with a disgraced fundraiser, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton sets a significant new standard for how campaigns should respond in the face of potential scandal. Clinton's decision also underscores the price - financial and political - that her campaign is paying for failing to spot trouble with the fundraiser, Norman Hsu, even after receiving a warning. The campaign announced it would now conduct background checks on its fundraisers, an extraordinary and potentially time consuming step. By returning the money, Clinton also puts pressure on presidential rivals and other politicians with rainmakers who have dubious pasts or who have employed questionable fundraising tactics, including the campaigns of Barack Obama and John Edwards. Norman Hsu, who was arrested last week on a previous felony conviction. Questions remain about how Hsu raised the money.

Union files suit against US to stop immigration raids

A lawsuit to be filed by the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union alleges that federal officials unlawfully detained workers and violated their rights during raids of six Swift & Co. meatpacking plants in December. The Union seeks an injunction to stop federal officials from conducting what the union calls illegal workplace raids. 

Best practices for Brazilian lawyers in cross-border transactions

Brazilian lawyers and law firms are increasing finding themselves representing Brazilian clients involved in transactions with foreign companies or investors. This experience has undoubtedly caused many practitioners to ask what are "best practices" when providing legal advice to Brazilian clients engaged in cross-border transactions with foreign companies or investors. International lawyer Robert Eugene DiPaolo, MD of the Fidelis Group,a law firmbased in New York and São Paulo, publishes today a consequential article on delivering effective legal services in international context. You can read the English version by clicking here. A Portuguese version of the article is in preparation and will be available shortly. 

The authoritative resource for information on the worldwide legal profession

Martindale-Hubbel's Legal Network is the most complete, widely used and trusted source of information on the worldwide legal profession - and one of the most effective ways for lawyers to promote their practices. The Lawyer Locator to find the credentials of more than one million lawyers and firms is available in a click here.

Before you open the door to the boardroom, peek through the keyhole!

Have a look at the new section of the Migalhas website and discover the professional development opportunities with large corporations presented by Michael Page International. Click here to peep through the hole!

  • Crumbs!

1 - Gordon Brown rejects union demands for public sector pay increases. (Read more)

2 - Tories say supermarkets should be forced to charge for parking. (Read more)

3 - Chinese inflation rise fuels interest rate fears. (Read more)

4 - Lawyers for Sir Paul McCartney and Heather Mills top list of highest-profile solicitors. (Read more)

5 - MacCann: Fund could be blocked from paying legal costs. (Read more)

6 - 9/11 attack victims honored six years later. (Read more)

7 - OPEC considers oil output rise. (Read more)

________________

100% Migalhas:  www.migalhas.com

______________

  • MiMIC Journal

Chinese inflation at decade high

Chinese inflation has hit its second 10-year high in two months, led again by a further sharp rise in meat prices. China's rate of consumer price inflation hit 6.5% in the year to August, up from 5.6% in July. China's central bank has raised interest rates four times already this year to try to control inflation.

At Frankfurt Motor Show, weeding out Chinese knockoffs

European automakers are taking legal action against China's carmakers, saying the Chinese are making blatant copies of models from the west. A Chinese car model, similar to the Smart Fortwo, that many had expected to see at the Frankfurt motor show is conspicuous by its absence, following legal threats from DaimlerChrysler. But another model by the same Chinese firm Shuanghuan Automobile, which is said to be similar to a BMW M5, is on show.

Paulson says U.S. legislation on China trade could threaten economy

"When we look at taking unilateral actions aimed at another nation, this can have enormous repercussions to our economic well-being," the U.S. treasury secretary said in an interview.

  • Grammatigalhas

Legal Meaning Is Not Everyday Meaning

Common Law

Body of law based on judicial decisions and precedent that has become the basis of the legal system in Great Britain and the United States (except in Louisiana, where civil law is the legal foundation). Many of the legal concepts in use today, including the law of contracts, are derived from common law.

Stare Decisis

Latin phrase meaning "to stand by the decisions." This legal doctrine under common law requires courts to rely on precedents, or previous decisions, when deciding disputes unless there is a compelling reason to reject those precedents. In most instances, this doctrine means that courts will decide disputes over insurance contracts the same way they have decided cases with similar facts and legal issues in the past.

Case Method

A system of instruction or study of law focused upon the analysis of court opinions rather than lectures and textbooks; the predominant method of teaching in U.S. law schools today. Langdell viewed the law as a science and believed that it should be studied as a science. Law, he said, consists of certain principles or doctrines. To have such a mastery of these as to be able to apply them with constant facility and certainty to the ever-tangled skein of human affairs, is what constitutes a true lawyer; and hence to acquire that mastery should be the business of every earnest student of law.

Casebook

A printed compilation of judicial decisions illustrating the application of particular principles of a specific field of law, such as torts, that is used in legal education to teach students under the case method system.

Everyday “Legal” Jargon 

The American Legal System

Sources of Law

Constitutional Law is based on a formal document that defines broad powers. Federal constitutional law originates from the U.S. constitution. State constitutional law originates from the individual state constitutions.

Statutes and Ordinances are legislation passed on the federal, state, or local levels.

Common Law is based on the concept of precedence - on how the courts have interpreted the law. Under common law, the facts of a particular case are determined and compared to previous cases having similar facts in order to reach a decision by analogy. Common law applies mostly at the state level. It originated in the 13th century when royal judges began recording their decisions and the reasoning behind the decisions.

Administrative Law - federal, state, and local level. Administrative law is made by administrative agencies that define the intent of the legislative body that passed the law.

The sources of law have both vertical and horizontal dimensions. Vertical dimensions include federal authority, state authority, and concurrent authority. Federalism refers to this form of government, in which there is national and local authority. Federal authority covers laws related to patents, pensions and profit sharing, and labor issues. State authority covers business association, contracts, and trade secrets. Concurrent authority covers security law, tax law, and employment law. Note that employment law refers to non-union relationships; labor law refers to union relationships. 

The horizontal dimension is related to the separation of power between the executive branch, which creates administrative law, the legislative branch, which creates statutes, and the judicial branch, which creates common law. The judicial system in the U.S. has a pyramid structure consisting of fewer higher level courts and more lower level courts: 

-- Supreme Court --

--------- Appellate Courts ---------

-------------------- Trial Courts ---------------------

Actually, there are two pyramid structures - one for federal courts and one for state courts. State courts may use different terminology; for example, trial courts may be called courts of common plea, appellate courts may be called superior courts or commonwealth courts. 

Classifications of Law

Substantive law vs. procedural law:  Substantive law creates, defines, and regulates legal rights and obligations. Procedural law defines the rules that are used to enforce substantive law.

Common law vs. statutory law:  Common law is defined by judges. Statutory law is passed by legislatures. For example, the Securities Act of 1933 is statutory law.

Criminal law vs. civil law:  Criminal law is between private parties and society. Civil law is between private parties only.

Jurisdiction

Jurisdiction is the power of a court to hear a particular case. In order for a court to have jurisdiction, it must have both subject matter jurisdiction (the power to hear the type of claim being asserted) and personal jurisdiction (power over the person).

Subject Matter Jurisdiction 

Article III of the U.S. constitution states that federal courts have only certain types of subject matter jurisdiction. To satisfy subject matter jurisdiction, a federal court must have either: 

1. Federal question jurisdiction - federal courts have federal question jurisdiction in cases involving the federal constitution, federal statutes, or federal treaties. 

2. Diversity jurisdiction - diversity jurisdiction requires both a) $75,000 or more at issue, and b) the parties must be residents of different states. Diversity jurisdiction applies for example, to a case in which a traveler passing through a different state from his/her home state is accused of a serious offense, and in which the plaintiff, attorneys, and judge may all be close friends. 

3. suit by or against the U.S. government, 

4. Miscellaneous - certain types of cases such as those related to patents, bankruptcy, admirality (maritime cases), trademarks and copyrights, etc. 

Items 1) and 2) can be tried in either state or federal courts (concurrent state/federal jurisdiction). Items 3) and 4) may be heard only by federal courts. 

Personal Jurisdiction 

Types of personal jurisdiction: 

1. in personam - court has power over a particular person - in personam applies if minimum contact is established. For non-residents of a state, a state court may still have jurisdiction if the person travels regularly to the state on business or has a post office box in the state. Each state has its own definition of what constitutes doing business in the state, as determined by common law. 

2. in Rem - a court has power if a particular piece of property is in the state. 

3. consent - when a contract specifies in which state any disputes are settled. The contract can specify a third state in which neither party does business. 

Just because a case is heard by a particular state court does not mean that that state's laws apply. The states whose laws are used can be specified in the contract. One state's court can hear a case under another state's laws. 

Lifecycle of a Lawsuit

In the beginning phase of a lawsuit, there is a complaint, followed by the defendant's answer in which he or she tries to counter everything in the claim. The defendant then may file a counterclaim. Counterclaims are lawsuits within a lawsuit in which the defendant files a claim against the plaintiff. There then may be a preliminary motion, of which the outcome can be dismissal due to no legal claim based on reading the complaint, or a summary judgment in which a decision can be based on the facts of the case that are not in dispute.

The middle phase of a lawsuit is the discovery phase, in which each side attempts to determine how strong their case is. The discovery phase consists of interrogatories, depositions, and admissions. By this point, most cases are settled.

The end phase of a lawsuit is the trial, beginning with a pre-trial conference in which the parties attempt to settle in front of a judge without going to court. The trial then proceeds with the evidence and then a judgment and possibly a post-judgment. The post-judgment may be that a new trial is necessary, such as in cases of mistrial.

The defendant usually has the right to one appeal within a certain period of time. An appeal is filed with the appellate court, there are briefs, oral arguments, and then a decision.

The judgment is enforced by first obtaining an execution that freezes the defendant's assets. The defendant is served and the assets are levied. The defendant, however, may choose to file for bankruptcy protection, in which case all creditors are stopped, including court judgments.

Remedies

There are two types of remedies: legal and equitable. Legal remedies are money-based and seek to financially compensate one for the damage that has occurred. Equitable remedies require a specific performance. Examples of equitable remedies are injunctions, restitution, and reformation. In cases where damages are difficult to quantify, equitable remedies may be more appropriate.

Legal Case Study

When attempting to understand how courts interpret the law, it is worthwhile to study past cases of similar legal issues. Past legal cases provide the opportunity to understand the law by studying well-argued positions from both sides. When studying a case, the following points should be identified:

Facts. One should identify which facts are important and which are not.

Issue. One should isolate the specific legal issue relevant to the case.

Court holding (ruling)

Reasoning (why the court decided as it did).

As If Your Life Depended On It… or How to get to Carnegie Hall? - Practice, practice

Spill the beans

Reveal information or a secret. An Americanism that may come from bean as US slang for 'head' (spill or let slip what is in one's head). More likely it comes from ‘know one's beans’ (know what's what); this is clearly related to the early 17th century English saying ‘know how many beans make five’, which has the same meaning. It is a short step from knowing one's beans to spilling them, i.e. telling what one knows.

Spoil the ship for a ha'porth of tar

Spoil something by economizing on a small detail. This was originally, from at least 1600, 'lose the sheep [often 'hog'] for a half-pennyworth of tar' - i.e. let the animal die for want of spending a trivial sum on tar to protect its sores or wounds from infection by flies. 'Ship' was the dialect pronunciation of 'sheep' over much of England, and non-country folk obviously assumed that the expression referred to a ship, the assumption being reinforced by the reference to tar, which was widely used on wooden ships to coat and preserve the timbers. To complete this transformation of a rustic expression into a nautical-sounding one, the rather extravagant and unconvincing idea of 'losing' an entire ship for the sale of a small economy was changed to 'spoiling' and the now familiar version emerged in the mid-19th century.

A person who is tarred with the same brush has the same faults as someone else being referred to. It is probable that this image also comes from the application of tar to animals, either for the purpose already described or to mark them out as members of the same flock.

________________

Tell your friends and colleagues you’ve read it in Migalhas International

______________

  • Historia Verdadera

Menem proceso

Un juez argentino volvió a procesar al ex presidente Carlos Menem por su presunta responsabilidad en la venta ilegal de armas a Ecuador y Croacia durante su gobierno en la década de los años 90. El magistraod Rafael Caputo decidió embargar los bienes del ex mandatario por más de US$ 110 mlls.

China – Colombia

El ministro de Comercio, Industria y Turismo, Luis Guillermo Plata, emprendió gestiones en el gigante asiático, para agilizar la firma del Acuerdo de Promoción y Protección Recíproca de Inversiones y un protocolo fitosanitario y de sanidad animal que permita potenciar las exportaciones de productos agropecuarios colombianos al país oriental.

TLC

El Comité de Finanzas del Senado de EEUU inició este martes el debate del tratado de libre comercio con Lima. Su Presidente dijo que los objetivos laborales han sido logrados. Colombia aguarda su turno. Será después que Perú alcance u  acuerdo.

_______________

Read Migalhas LatinoAmerica every Tuesday and Thursday. Visit the website at www.la.migalhas.com

_______________

  • Brief News

US marks sixth 9/11 anniversary

Americans have held a series of solemn ceremonies to mark six years since the 11 September 2001 attacks on the US. Church bells tolled at 0846 local time to mark the moment when the first Trade Center tower was hit.  A new message purported to be from Bin Laden has been released to coincide with the anniversary. It is the sixth video released by al-Qaeda featuring the hijackers. Bush is to announce troop reductions in Iraq in a speech later this week, the White House says.

Estrada gets life for corruption 

Philippine ex-leader Joseph Estrada is convicted and jailed for life for embezzling $80m while in office.

Five guilty in Chicago mob trial

A US jury has found four mobsters and an ex-policeman guilty of a criminal conspiracy that involved years of extortion and murder. The verdict in a Chicago court came at the end of what was billed as the biggest organized crime trial in years. The jury heard about 18 gangland murders, including two killings later depicted in the 1995 movie Casino.

EU gives up on 'metric Britain'

European Union commissioners have ruled that Britain can carry on using imperial measurements such as pints, pounds and miles. It follows years of wrangling between London and Brussels over metrication.

Dollar at record low against euro 

The US dollar falls to a record against the euro ($1.388) as investors bet that interest rates will be cut next week.

Brazil bans imports from Mattel toys because of worldwide recalls

Brazil said Tuesday it has banned imports from toy maker Mattel Inc. until the government can evaluate whether the American company is fully abiding by local safety regulations. The decision went into effect Aug. 17, following Mattel's announcement it was recalling millions of Chinese-made toys over worries they were tainted with lead paint. The government only made its ruling public Tuesday in a statement on the Trade and Development Ministry's Web site.

Petrobras to invest US$4.9 billion in United States

Petrobras said Monday it will invest US$4.9 billion  in the United States from 2008 to 2012, a third of its budget for overseas investments. Petrobras will continue to focus on the U.S. side of the Gulf of Mexico, Latin America and West Africa. The company will spend US$15 billion overseas out of the US$112 billion it has earmarked for investments in 2008 to 2012.

Lewis buys 7% Bear Stearns stake

Billionaire British investor Joseph Lewis has spent about $860m buying a 7% stake in struggling US investment bank Bear Stearns. The move is seen as a major boost for Bear Stearns, which has been one of the firms most affected by the crisis in the US sub-prime mortgage sector. Bear Stearns had to spend $1.6bn in June to bail out two of its funds exposed to sub-prime defaults. The firm's then co-president Warren Spector resigned at the time.

Texan 'gave millions to Saddam'

A Texan oil billionaire has gone on trial in the US accused of paying millions of dollars in kickbacks to Saddam Hussein's government. Oscar Wyatt, 83, is said to have given the money to Baghdad officials to illegally buy extra Iraqi oil under the United Nations' oil-for-food program. This scheme ran from 1996 to 2003 and allowed Iraq to finance humanitarian goods purchases through sales of oil.

Time magazine to appeal $106M damages award in Suharto defamation suit 

Time  magazine announced Tuesday that it plans to appeal an August 30 decision  by the Supreme Court of Indonesia awarding former Indonesian President Haji Mohammad Suharto  $106 million in damages in Suharto’s defamation suit against the publication. Suharto sued Time over a 1999 article  that said Suharto had hidden billions of dollars in foreign banks. The Supreme Court overturned two lower court decisions against Suharto, ordering Time to pay damages and publish a formal apology in Indonesian newspapers and its own magazine. A lawyer for the magazine said that Time stands by the months of research conducted for the story, and that it will "take any legal measures available to defend freedom of the press." No further details of the appeal were given.

EU says Serbia deal dependant on cooperation with war crimes tribunal 

The European Union said Monday that it will only sign a new pre-membership aid and economic deal with Serbia when that country has demonstrated its cooperation with the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) . Carla Del Ponte , the ICTY chief prosecutor, will submit a report in the next few weeks to the EU suggesting whether she believes Serbia is fully cooperating with the ICTY. Del Ponte has discouraged agreements between Serbia and the EU before  based on Serbia's lack of progress in the capture and arrest of war crimes fugitive Ratko Mladic . Previous negotiations were put on hold  for more than 13 months after Del Ponte determined Belgrade was not actively pursuing wanted fugitives.

Wiretaps 'foiled terror attacks'

The US director of intelligence has said wiretaps played a significant role in stopping bomb attacks by suspected Islamists in Germany last week. Michael McConnell told a Senate committee eavesdropping had revealed that the suspects had obtained explosive liquids.

He said Congress should not restrict the program.

Brazilian city begins implanting microchips in pit bulls to track them

Belo Horizonte, the capital of Minas Gerais state, has begun implanting microchips in pit bulls in an effort to track the dogs and punish the owners of pets involved in attacks.

Bolivia to require visas for U.S. tourists Dec. 1

Bolivia announced Tuesday it will require visas for U.S. tourists beginning Dec. 1, following through on a pledge to treat Americans much like they treat Bolivians entering the United States.

Federal judge tosses out NYC calorie posting rule for restaurants

A federal judge struck down a New York City rule Tuesday that required fast-food restaurants to post calorie counts on their menus, but he suggested that expanding the rule to include more restaurants could make it legal.

Extension of Microsoft antitrust pact requested

In an eleventh-hour request, a group of six states and the District yesterday asked a judge to extend the terms of Microsoft's antitrust settlement through 2012. Most of those provisions are scheduled to expire in November. Microsoft continues to have a stronghold on the two products, Windows and Internet Explorer, that almost all consumers use for accessing these Web services and applications,

Why Indians fight modernization

Recent attacks on Indian-owned and operated retail stores in several Indian states suggest that many Indians object as much to modernization as to globalization. As with the stymied Indo-America civilian nuclear cooperation agreement, the problem is more psychological than political. It has been dinned into Indians for decades that businessmen are crooked, that the generation of wealth is evil and that foreigners are out to loot and pillage the country. The mythology of the recent past painted the United States as the sinister "foreign hand" behind India's social, political and economic troubles. Salvation lay in socialism, virtuous austerity and nonalignment. That is why Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has been forced to put on hold the nuclear deal he reached with Bush. A former American ambassador to India, William Saxbe, put it into words in the 1970s: "When I call on cabinet ministers, the president, or governors, they all love to talk about their sons, sons-in-law and daughters in the U.S. and how well they're doing and how well they like things. The next day I read in the papers the very same people are denouncing the U.S. as a totally different kind of country."

Unmarried fathers in Ireland gain parental rights in landmark ruling

An unmarried father of twin boys must have his children returned to his custody from England, a Dublin judge ruled Tuesday in a landmark judgment for the parental rights of unmarried men.

  • Daily Press Review

Ethiopia rings in new Millennium
BBC News, Centrist newscaster, London, England

UN blue helmets help Congolese soldiers and families escape latest fighting
CongoPlanet.com, Independent online news aggregator

Opinion: A Ghanian take on homosexuality
GhanaWeb, Online news portal, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Uganda: Army Abuses Civilians in Plan to Secure Karamoja
Human Rights Watch (Africa), International news press releases

Fossett search party turns to Google
iafrica, Online news portal, Cape Town, South Africa

Body of missing man found in latrine
Independent Online, News portal, Cape Town, South Africa

Provinces spend millions on strike recovery
Mail & Guardian Online, Liberal, Johannesburg, South Africa

Journo hit on head, strangled
News24.com, Online news portal, Cape Town, South Africa

Wipro to open New Global Development Centre in Mexico
Brazil Sun, Independent online news aggregator

Who Dem responds to Chuck Fender Bahamas kidnap attempt
Caribbean News Portal, Online news aggregator

Brazil: Report on Past Atrocities a Key Step Forward
Human Rights Watch (Americas), International news press releases

El Salvador:  Closing of Dumps Necessary But Not Sufficient
IPS Latin America, International cooperative of journalists, Rome, Italy

Golden hour - Bruce takes office in Jamaica today
Jamaica Gleaner, Independent daily, Kingston, Jamaica

Peru: Congressman Proposes to Suspend Safety and Emissions Inspections
Living in Peru, News portal, Lima, Peru

Historically speaking, the census represents us
The Globe and Mail, Centrist daily, Toronto, Canada

Canadians remember 9/11
Toronto Star, Liberal daily, Toronto, Canada

Some 121 hot spots detected in South Kalimantan
Antara News, News agency, Jakarta, Indonesia

9/11 Panel Chairmen Say U.S. Safer, But 'Not Safe Enough'
Chosun Ilbo, Conservative daily, Seoul, South Korea

Thai police deny arrest of 'KP'
India Express, News portal, Mumbai, India

Delhi cops continue to nag Khurana
India Times, Conservative daily, New Delhi, India

Living with the 'Sea of Japan'
Japan Times, Independent centrist, Tokyo, Japan

10.7p.c. or projects under 9MP have been completed
Malaysian Star, Online news portal,  Selangor Darul Ehsan, Malaysia

Japan's PM tells coalition he will resign
New Zealand Herald, Conservative daily, Auckland, New Zealand

Indian state sacks 6,500 police constables
People's Daily Online, English-language, Beijing, China

Bec 'devastated' by orphanage claims
Sydney Morning Herald, Centrist daily, Sydney, Australia

UPA-Left panel to hold talks on implications of Hyde Act
The Hindu, Left-leaning daily, Chennai, India

Police 'too afraid of criticism'
BBC News, Centrist newscaster, London, England

Zambezi set for Arc prep
BreakingNews.ie, Online news portal, Cork, Ireland

Madeleine: Police seek special powers to seize 'mystery object'
Daily Mail, Conservative daily, London, England

Dutch newspaper selects SPSS predictive analytics solution
DMeurope, Online news portal, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Ellie Lawrenson's gran not guilty of manslaughter
icLiverpool, Online news portal, Liverpool, England

Turkish police find van packed with explosives
International Herald Tribune, Independent daily, Paris, France

New Czech novel inspired by story of paratroopers who eliminated Heydrich
Radio Prague, Online news portal, Prague, Czech Republic

Prosecutor Wants 'Mystery Object'
Sky News, Independent newscaster, Middlesex, England

Berlin Zookeeper Rumbles Crafty Cub:  Knut Feigning Sore Paw to Get Attention
Spiegel International, Liberal newsmagazine, Hamburg, Germany

Bush poised to announce limited Iraq troop pullout
The Guardian, Liberal daily, London, England

China can ease market turmoil - WB
The Irish Times, Centrist daily, Dublin, Ireland

Comedian Jon Stewart to host Oscars
The Scotsman, Moderate daily, Edinburgh, Scotland

8m win after dad loses job
The Sun, Conservative tabloid, London, England

Bomb scare at Savoy Hotel was hoax
The Telegraph, Conservative daily, London, England

General gets rough ride as senators fight for high ground over election
Times Online, Conservative daily, London, England

Peres Can't Understand Why Arabs Attack Jews
Arutz Sheva, Online, right-wing, Tel Aviv, Israel

Turkish Police Foil Bombing in Capital
Asharq Al-Awsat, Pan-Arab daily, London, England

Australia's Howard stays on as party chief
Gulf News, Independent daily, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

N. Korea condemns Israel for invading Syrian airspace
Haaretz, Liberal daily, Tel Aviv, Israel

Bridging the Shia-Sunni Divide With Free Trade
IPS Middle East, International cooperative of journalists, Rome, Italy

Galfar IPO raises over $2 billion
Middle East North African Network, Online financial portal, Amman, Jordan

U.S. and Bin Laden Mark Sixth Anniversary of Sept. Attacks
Nahamet, Online news portal, Beirut, Lebanon

Israel hit Syria with 'quick strike' - US official
The Daily Star, Independent daily, Beirut, Lebanon

Female activists threaten to boycott coming elections 
Yemen Times, Independent weekly, Sana'a, Yemen

________________

How are we doing?

We would like to hear from you how we perform. What you like and what we should change or add... Send us an email; we aim to please!

Tell your friends and associates ...

... to subscribe to Migalhas International! www.migalhas.com

Express yourself

Want to share your opinion, your experience, your questions? You are welcome to do so. This forum is yours. Please contact the editor: [email protected]

Events

We welcome information about your events or conferences to come. Please contact the editor.

Sponsors

Become a sponsor. Spread your name in the business and legal spheres around the world in Migalhas International.

Subscription

To subscribe: Register your name and your address at www.migalhas.com

To unsubscribe: Send your name and e-mail address to in the subject line. We will remove your name soonest.

Address changes: If you want to continue to receive Migalhas International, please make sure we have your current e-mail address.

Contact

Michael Ghilissen, editor: [email protected]

Miguel Matos, publisher: [email protected]

Please feel free to send your comments, questions and suggestions to the editor.

Your comments

We always welcome information, articles, testimonials and comments about something you've read in Migalhas International. Please forward your contributions to the editor.

Confidentiality

When you add your name to Migalhas International, you can be sure that it's confidential. We do not share, trade, rent or sell this list. Our "privacy policy" contains no fine print. No one gets our list. Period. Your e-mail address is safe with us.

Sharing Migalhas International

If you'd like to share this Migalhas International with friends and colleagues, feel free to forward this issue including the copyright notice. Or, invite them to subscribe so they receive their own Migalhas International every week.

Sources

The content of the Migalhas International newsletter is edited for purposes of news reporting, comments and education from several sources, including: The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Boston Globe, The London Times, Le Monde, Frankfurter Allgemeine, The Financial Times, Google News, Paper Chase (jurist.law.pitt.edu), The World Press Review: https://www.worldpress.org, Forbes, Fortune, Time, Newsweek, Harvard Business Review, American Lawyer Media, FindLaw.com, Reuters, Associated Press, Internet Business Law Services, Folha de Sao Paulo, O Estado do Sao Paulo, Lexis Nexis, West Law, CNN, The Globe and Mail, The Los Angeles Times, Wikipedia and more.

Fair use notice

This newsletter contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of legal, environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material in this newsletter is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.

The messages that appear in this newsletter are for informational purposes only. They are not intended to be and should not be considered legal advice nor substitute for obtaining legal advice from competent, independent, legal counsel in the relevant jurisdiction.

Transmission of this information is not intended to create, and receipt does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship. The information contained on this list may or may not reflect the most current legal developments.

www.migalhas.com

Copyright 2007 - Migalhas International

The messages that appear in this newsletter are for informational purposes only. They are not intended to be and should not be considered legal advice nor substitute for obtaining legal advice from competent, independent, legal counsel in the relevant jurisdiction.

Transmission of this information is not intended to create, and receipt does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship. The information contained on this list may or may not reflect the most current legal development.