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Injunction
An injunction is an equitable remedy in the form of a court order, whereby a party is required to do, or to refrain from doing, certain acts. The party that fails to adhere to the injunction faces civil or criminal penalties and may have to pay damages or accept sanctions for failing to follow the court's order. In some cases, breaches of injunctions are considered serious criminal offenses that merit arrest and possible prison sentences or death.
Injunction against Hood extended through date of hearing, State Farm notices deposition of Scruggs in Hood injunction case
How bad is it, just how embarrassing is it, for a state Attorney General to get tagged with an injunction by the company he spent months demonizing and investigating? Probably about as bad as: Having to sit silently in your office for months, and on the few occasions when you do speak, having to pretend to get all excited about going after makers of fake contact lenses and foreign toys...
Will the Court Order an Injunction Regarding Titleist ProV1 Golf Balls? If So, Will the Court Stay the Injunction Pending Acushnet's Appeal?
Let me set the stage, as I know that all the filings in the ProV1 patent dispute can become overwhelming. Back in December a jury found that 8 of the 9 claims in the 4 patents-in-suit were valid, and therefore infringed by Acushnet (click HERE to read the post on the verdict)...
Wikileaks Injunction:
I'm too swamped to blog about this troubling case in detail now, but Prof. Michael Froomkin (Discourse.Net) has a good post on this, with links; see also this follow-up...
Wikileaks: One Injunction Or Two?
There seems to be real and continuing confusion about what exactly happened in the wikileaks case. (Translation: I’m confused, and so are some other people...
Preliminary Injunction
A vacated pair of precedential preliminary injunction appeals put claim construction and KSR as the cruxes of justification...
The Wikileaks Injunction
A website operator, wikilinks.org, says it will defy a U.S. court's order and continue its practice of allowing the posting of documents in the Julius Baer bank case, in which the bank is accused of illegal business dealings...
















