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BusinessWeek July 4, 2005 Mike France |
Courtroom Strategies On Trial Recent high-profile verdicts have prosecutors and defense attorneys rewriting their playbooks. |
Reason March 2005 Matt Welch |
Taking the Fifth When journalists threaten our right to remain silent. |
BusinessWeek May 8, 2006 Lorraine Woellert |
The-Reporter-Did-It-Defense Ken Lay claims the press sped Enron's fall by scaring investors. Does he have a case? |
InternetNews March 11, 2005 Erin Joyce |
Bloggers on The Front Lines The Apple trade secrets case has become a defining moment for blogs that practice journalism. |
Fast Company December 2003 Jennifer Reingold |
Make the Buck, Then Pass It We attend the opening arguments in the cases of Frank Quattrone and Dennis Kozlowski, and learn that, hey, these kingpins were merely powerless cogs (just like us). |
The Motley Fool April 2, 2004 Rich Smith |
Tyco's Kozlowski Walks The judge in the Kozlowski-Swartz case has declared a mistrial. |
Reason January 2003 Walter K. Olson |
Courting Stupidity Why smart lawyers pick dumb jurors. |
CFO February 1, 2006 Kate O'Sullivan |
The Best Defense In today's high-stakes legal environment, top white-collar attorneys are ready to defend the CFO. |
Fast Company September 2004 Scott Kirsner |
One Tough Assignment When CEO Ed Breen took over at Tyco, he fired the very board that had hired him. And that was just the start. |
Reason November 2005 Tim Cavanaugh |
Run Away, Jury! The problem with the American legal system isn't the rapacious lawyers -- it's the idiotic jurors. |
BusinessWeek November 29, 2004 Mike France |
Is There A Market For Nonpartisan News? One of the worst by-products of our venomously partisan political culture is a growing distrust of anyone who claims to be nonpartisan -- particularly journalists. |
Parameters Brendan R. Mclane |
Reporting from a Sandstorm: An Appraisal of Embedding In an age of the continuous media cycle and information transparency, Operation Iraqi Freedom marked the first time so many reporters were provided so much relatively unrestricted front-line access. |
Psychology Today Mar/Apr 2007 Matthew Hutson |
Unnatural Selection There's a thriving industry built on the scientific selection of jurors, but social psychologists aren't sure just how accurate it is, or whether it gives legal adversaries an edge. |
Reason December 2002 Matt Welch |
Woe is Media There have never been better conditions for journalism than in present-day America. Yet there is an influential movement, and an entire publishing mini-genre, dedicated to convincing us that's not so. It's time to save journalism from its saviors. |
BusinessWeek August 7, 2006 Jon Fine |
Front Page News? Not Quite As long as advertisers aren't coddled in stories, who cares where their ads appear? |
Financial Advisor December 2006 Mary Rowland |
The Real Scoop On Manipulating The Press Financial advisors need to understand that talking to journalists is not a substitute for working on a marketing plan. |
Sports Central September 30, 2010 Mark Chalifoux |
Picture This Reporters are not fans. There has to be at least a facade of professionalism. |