The appeals court hearing Microsoft's antitrust appeal gave the company something it didn't ask for--another crack at U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson.
Published:
7 February 2001 y., Wednesday
In a scheduling order issued Tuesday afternoon, the Court of Appeals included time during oral arguments to address Jackson's courtroom procedures and post-trial comments. Neither side--Microsoft or the Justice Department and 19 states--had requested time to discuss Jackson in their legal brief filed Friday.
Andy Gavil, an antitrust professor at Howard University Law School, said the appeals court's action indicates Microsoft's attack on Jackson resonated with some of the jurists.
In briefs filed during its appeal, Microsoft relentlessly attacked Jackson's credibility, using statements he made following the trial's close to question his credibility and handling of the case and to infer bias. Legal experts already had warned that Jackson's ongoing comments about the case--some of which were leveled at the Court of Appeals--had undermined the government's victory. They also warned that no matter what the outcome of the appeal, Jackson would likely be removed from the case should any portion be sent back to the District Court.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District Columbia Circuit will hear oral arguments in the case on Feb. 26 and 27. Besides adding 30 minutes per side to address Jackson, the court significantly bumped up the time allotment in other areas.
Šaltinis:
CNET News.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Hong Kong has surpassed Singapore to become the least bureaucratic region in Asia
more »
The Polish central bank raised its key interest rates by a quarter percentage point, a statement said
more »
The Slovakian finance ministry has raised its 2004 forecast for economic growth to 4.7%, from 4.1%, officials said
more »
Romanian Prime Minister Adrian Nastase has said he expects the economy to grow by 7 percent year-on-year in 2004
more »
Staff Writer Court marshals have given Yukos a month to pay off its $3.4 billion tax bill, raising faint hopes that the company may stave off bankruptcy
more »
Global oil prices were down slightly as of late in the day on 29 July after the Russian Justice Ministry backed away from efforts to force embattled oil giant Yukos to stop selling oil
more »
The Irish low-cost carrier Ryanair, in its first foray into the expanded European Union, has introduced three new routes between Rīga and the United Kingdom, Finland and Germany
more »
A police crackdown on bus traffic in the Czech capital caught 10 drunk bus drivers in a single day, police said Wednesday
more »
The Moscow City Court on Tuesday upheld the Basmanny court's ruling to freeze the Swiss bank accounts of the Yukos oil company's main trader Petroval and remove the trader's documents
more »
The European Union and Russia have signed an agreement on steel supplies that introduces amendments to the 2002 accord
more »