This is part of a series of articles discussing recent orders of interest issued in patent cases by the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts.
In Banhazl v. The American Ceramic Society, et al., No. 1:16-cv-10791, following a bench trial Judge Burroughs awarded plaintiff Terrie Banhazl $161,939.52 in damages.
Judge Shannon Frison, sitting in the Middlesex County Superior Court in Massachusetts, recently issued a ruling that highlights for employers the importance of providing complete and timely responses to requests for employee personnel files.
they have been very protective of her and others and i think it is a good push that we should have the attorney general should be an elected officials separate and apart from the president so the weekend actually have investigations that should be done. we are waiting on the e-mails and one last question for the judge if i may. what was the difference here? fact that the request got pressed and cannot take until january? got to start rolling this out next week, what was the to been point? that could be because federal judges have a lot of power and as we know the administration has gotten in trouble with federal judges this year so it could be a federal judge saying no, you are going to start losing dollars could the judge say produce the server. by order of court. not on his or her own. it has to be in response to a motion, motion to compel. i am not really comfortable with