Coldplay, Satriani reach settlement over plagiarism row

Washington, September 16 (ANI): Coldplay has reportedly reached a legal settlement with guitarist Joe Satriani over a plagiarism lawsuit.

The band were served with a lawsuit by Satriani, who alleged the rockers lifted his 2004 instrumental, “I Just Wanna Fly,” for the basic melody of “Viva La Vida”.

Both the parties were said to have settled the matter, and copyright infringement lawsuit has been dismissed, reports Contactmusic.

According to Billboard.com, a confession of any wrongdoing will not be required from the group, who have always denied the claims.

A statement from the Brits said: “If there are any similarities between our two pieces of music, they are entirely coincidental, and just as surprising to us as to him.”

Both sides declined to comment about the settlement. (ANI)

Ex-worker sues Tyra Banks over outstanding wages

London, Sept 4 (ANI): A former employee of Tyra Banks has sued her claiming she has held back his wages worth thousands of dollars.

Richard Thomas filed a lawsuit in Los Angeles County Superior Court charging the supermodel-turned-TV presenter of not paying him 3, 638 pounds, reports the Daily Star.

According to TMZ.com, Thomas says he is due money for “services rendered as assistant and advisor” to the star.

Although the legal papers insist that Thomas must himself ask Banks for the outstanding amount before filing the case, he says:

“I have not been able to catch (Tyra) while she is in.” (ANI)

Paris allowed to sue Hallmark over unauthorised image use

Washington, September 1 (ANI): A California court has allowed Paris Hilton to pursue a lawsuit against ‘Hallmark’ over claims that the greeting cards manufacturer used her image without her consent.

The socialite is alleging that the company used her snap and her catchphrase, ‘That’s Hot!’ on a card that read ‘Paris’s First Day as a Waitress.’

Paris claims the card reflects a scene from her hit reality TV show ‘The Simple Life’ and is taking the firm to the court, reports Contactmusic.

Judges at the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals gave the hotel heiress the opportunity to go ahead with the case, turning down Hallmark executives’ claims that the cartoon on the card was of a generic woman and not Hilton.

Judge Diarmuid O’Scannlain said: “The basic setting is the same: we see Paris Hilton, born to privilege, working as a waitress. (Hilton) has at least some probability of prevailing on the merits before a trier of fact.” (ANI)

Supreme Court issues notices to CBI, Kerala Govt on Vijayan case

New Delhi, Aug 31 (ANI): The Supreme Court on Monday issued notices to Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and Kerala Government over the state Governor’s permission to CBI to prosecute Pinarayi Vijayan.

The apex court was hearing the petition filed by Vijayan, challenging the governor’s sanction for his prosecution by the CBI.

Vijayan is the politburo member of Communist party of India (Marxist) (CPM)

A bench of the apex court comprising Justice R.V. Ravindran and Justice B.S. Sudarsan Reddy admitted Vijayan’s lawsuit directly for hearing.

The bench stated that the petition involved several important questions of law.

Vijayan is facing the charges of by passing the regulations while awarding a contract to a Canadian based company, SNC Lavalin for renovating three power plants when he was Kerala’s power minister in 1997.

The charges against Vijayan were filed in a special court after Kerala Governor R.S. Gavai gave the green signal to the CBI to prosecute the stalwart of communist movement in June.

Earlier, the central agency had asked Vijayan to appear before the CBI court at Kochi on September 24.

The Rs.374-crore SNC Lavalin scam, has created a tussle between Vijayan and State Chief Minister V.S.Achhuthanandan. (ANI)

Saying ‘I’m sorry’ favourably influences jurors’ decisions

Washington, Aug 25 (ANI): In a new study, researchers at George Mason University and Oklahoma State University showed that apologizing for negative outcomes could lead to more favourable verdicts for auditors in court.

Assistant accounting professors Rick Warne of Mason and Robert Cornell of OSU found that remedial tactics such as apologizing or first-person justification can result in lower frequencies of negligence verdicts in cases against auditors when compared to a control group receiving no remedial tactic.

Apologies allow the accused wrongdoer to express sorrow or regret about a situation without admitting guilt.

Alternatively, a first-person justification allows the accused to indicate the appropriateness of decisions given the information available when decisions were made.

“We found that apologies reduce the jurors’ need to assign blame to the auditor for any negative outcomes to the client. It also appears that a first-person justification influences the jurors impression that the auditor’s actions were reasonable and in accordance with professional standards,” Warne said.

The researchers administered several versions of a mock trial involving a lawsuit against an auditor whose actions had negative consequences on a client.

In the scenario utilized by the researchers, the auditor performed an appropriate audit, yet the audited company eventually went into bankruptcy.

The researchers examined whether a defendant making an apology, offering a justification, utilizing both techniques or remaining silent led to the most favorable verdicts.

Research in psychology, management and medicine concludes that remedial tactics are effective when expressed directly to injured parties.

However, the new research expands upon prior findings by examining the effects remedial tactics have on jurors who are indirectly involved and cannot directly forgive the accused.

“We know victims often respond favourably to an apology, but our findings suggest that even unharmed jurors react in a similar manner. Offering an apology though is not synonymous with admitting guilt,” Cornell said.

The study will be available in a forthcoming issue of Contemporary Accounting Research, published by the Canadian Academic Accounting Association. (ANI)

MJ had mapped out his life’s next chapter: Nephew

London, Aug 24 (ANI): Michael Jackson’s nephew Taj has said that the King of Pop had mapped out the next chapter of his life.

Tito Jackson’s son said that his uncle was looking forward to the London concerts and planning a movie career ahead.

“He had his next chapter mapped out. He wanted to do this (tour) and get on to the next chapter. The last words he said to me were, ‘We’re gong to do film after this,’” the Daily Star quoted him as saying.

The former 3T singer took to the stand while testifying in the planned King of Pop memorabilia tour lawsuit, in a bid to back his grandmother Katherine’s opposition to the deal.

He also added that he was against burying the icon at Neverland Ranch as the star came to “hate” the estate following his 2005 child molestation trial.

He said: “Neverland was never an option to us. It brought so much pain to him.”

Jackson will be buried at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California on 3 September. (ANI)

MJ death probe: Police raid his regular Beverly Hills pharmacy

London, Aug 22 (ANI): Cops have raided a pharmacy in Beverly Hills, where Michael Jackson was a regular, searching for any evidence of “improper dispensing of controlled substances”.

Jackson is believed to have received Demerol from Mickey Fine pharmacy, reports The Sun.

Dr Arnold Klein and other doctors who attended to Jackson also used the store frequently.

Meanwhile, a court has ruled that a case against the king of pop over a family reunion will still go on.

AllGood Entertainment had filed the lawsuit worth 24 million pounds but the company will have to sue Jackson’s estate now.

The firm claims he had agreed not to do any gigs before next July’s show – and broke the deal by planning 50 concerts at London’s 02. The trial is set for October 2010.

Meanwhile, Jackson’s burial has been postponed five days so that his family can “get things in order”. (ANI)

Twilight author Stephenie Meyer accused of plagiarism

London, Aug 21 (ANI): Twilight author Stephenie Meyer has been accused of plagiarism by an American woman.

Jordan Scott has alleged that the 2008 novel Breaking Dawn has a “striking and substantial similarity” to her 2006 fantasy The Nocturne.

She has now sent a cease and desist letter to the publishers of the fourth book in the hit Twilight series.

Scott has also filed a lawsuit to stop the sale of the novel and seek damages, reports the Daily Express.

According to TMZ.com, Scott notes in legal document that the two texts “show striking, articulable and substantial similarities in the… plot lines, themes, dialogue, mood, setting, pace, characters, sequence of events (and) ideas.”

Another argument is that the new book is a “significant literary departure from (Meyer’s) early books” and appears to be “written by a teenager” – just as Jordan’s novel does, as she started writing it when she was just 15.

However, Meyer insists that the charges are “completely without merit.”

This is not just the first time that Meyer has been accused of plagiarism.

Her former college roommate Heidi Stanton had filed a lawsuit earlier this year claiming that the hit series was based on a short story she wrote while both of them studied at Brigham Young University, Utah. (ANI)

Man, 85, robbed off Rs 25K over marriage offer to 25-year-old in Pak!

Islamabad, Aug 18 (ANI): An 85-year-old man has filed a lawsuit against two people including a girl for cheating him into getting married and robbing 25,000 rupees, it has emerged.

A private TV channel said Abdul Wahab of Sabzazar was promised marriage with a 25-year-old girl, reports the Daily times.ahab filed a petition against Shabana and her aide Ilyas of Allama Iqbal Town.

In the application, Wahab said he wanted to get a life partner.

He said Ilyas took the money to buy clothes for the girl. (ANI)

‘Supercool’ Paris Hilton charms judge during 8M dlrs lawsuit

New York, July 11 (ANI): Paris Hilton appeared to have worked her charms on a judge while testifying in a 8.3 million dollar lawsuit filed against her by movie investors.

The hotel heiress has been accused her of turning her back on promotional duties for the 2006 comedy, “Pledge This!”, a box office bomb that made just 2.9 million dollars.

The lawsuit claims the socialite disliked the movie, and pulled out of talk shows and radio and magazine interviews for the film in violation of her contract with the investors, reports the New York Daily News.

The 28-year-old jetted in from Dubai to Miami, sporting six-inch stiletto heels and a black dress, to appear for the case.

Paris said that she met her contract’s requirements and promoted the movies extensively, adding that the producers made “unreasonable demands” on her when her schedule was already full.

The star surprised Chief U.S. District Judge Federico Moreno by giving him a little wave before taking the stand.

The judge cracked: “I’ve never had a witness wave at me before.”

At one point, Paris was testifying about how full her dates were during rehearsals for her next movie, The Hottie and The Nottie,” when Moreno interrupted: “Was it better than this one?”referring to “Pledge This!”

“It was really good,” Hilton replied with a giggle. (ANI)

Lohan twitters “no formula was stolen” to create tanning line

Washington, Jul 9 (ANI): After being accused of stealing someone else’s formula for her tanning line, ‘Mean Girls’ star Lindsay Lohan has taken to her Twitter page to deny it.

Scientist Jennifer Sunday had filed a federal lawsuit against Lohan and her business partner Lorit Simon for breach of contract, theft of trade secrets, civil conspiracy, intentional interference with contractual relations and deceptive and unfair trade practices.

But Lohan, who takes credit for co-creating the spray tan mist, named after her lucky numbers, and sold for 35 dollars at Sephora, with Simon, a Las Vegas-based businesswoman, denies the theft.

“No formula was stolen for Sevin Nyne!” Us magazine quoted the actress, who just turned 23-years-old, as having written.

“It’s a woman looking for a payday. That’s it!” she added. (ANI)

Lindsay Lohan refused ‘Hangover’ role

New York, July 8 (ANI): Actress Lindsay Lohan was initially offered the role played by Heather Graham in hit film ‘The Hangover’.

According to Usmagazine.com, the ‘Mean Girls’ star was offered the role of Jade, a stripper played by Graham in the blockbuster film by Todd Phillips, but turned it down insisting that the screenplay “had no potential”. source said that Lohan’s agent “tried hard to get Phillips to consider her,” but “Lindsay said she didn’t like the script,” reports the New York Post.

However, Lohan’s representative was not available for comment.

Meanwhile, Lohan has once again landed herself in trouble with the law, with a chemist accusing her of stealing her tanning spray formula.

Jennifer Sunday, a St. Petersburg, Fla., chemist, filed the lawsuit in Tampa, Fla. Federal court against Lohan and Lorit Simon, a Las Vegas businesswoman who air-brush tans celebrities. (ANI)

Bush appointed Fed judges question Obama on terror policies

Washington, July 1 (ANI): President Barack Obama’s claims of broad executive authority to carry out the war on terror are drawing fire from an unexpected source: federal judges nominated by President George W. Bush, who asserted the sweeping powers in the first place.

In recent weeks, three different Bush appointees considering cases relating to war-on-terror detainees have rejected arguments from Obama’s Justice Department, which adopted virtually unchanged the positions the Bush administration had staked out.
In each case, according to Politico, the Bush-appointed judge said the executive branch was overstepping its authority and claiming more powers than the law allowed.

The irony, of course, is that Democrats railed against Bush for what many saw as a power grab in the months and years after the Sept. 11 attacks – when Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney asserted vast executive branch authority to wage wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and to hold prisoners in Guantanamo Bay and elsewhere.

In the years since, courts from the Supreme Court on down have begun to pare back that authority, saying in several high-profile rulings that Bush overstepped his bounds.

Since taking office, Obama has adopted many of these broad claims to executive authority as he’s inherited the war on terror from the past administration – but he is now facing some of the same legal constraints that Bush began to encounter in his closing years in office, sometimes in sharply worded decisions that show some courts have decided it’s time to rein in executive power.

In April, Judge John Bates turned aside the arguments of the Obama and Bush administrations in ruling that some prisoners at the U.S.-run Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan were entitled to challenge their detention in court if they were captured outside Afghanistan.

Earlier this month, San Francisco-based Judge Jeffrey White surprised many legal analysts when he refused to dismiss a lawsuit an alleged Al Qaeda operative and convicted terrorist, Jose Padilla, brought against former Justice Department attorney John Yoo over his alleged involvement in Bush’s decision to hold Padilla in a South Carolina Navy brig for more than three years.

And in a ruling last week, Judge Richard Leon second-guessed the Obama and Bush administrations’ claims that a Syrian detainee, Abdul Rahim Abdul Razak al-Janko, could be held at Guantanamo even though he was considered a spy by Al Qaeda and tortured at some length before he was captured by the U.S. in Afghanistan.

Several legal analysts said they doubted the judges were acting out of any desire to trip up Obama.

“I don’t think it’s partisan or personal,” said David Rivkin, a conservative attorney and lawyer for the administrations of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush.

Rivkin called the rulings “bad” and “deeply violative of constitutional principles,” but he said the decisions from Bush judges were a logical outgrowth of Supreme Court decisions pushing the judiciary to assert itself.

Even after the stinging defeats, the Obama Justice Department is continuing to fight at least two of the rulings. (ANI)

Spielberg, Smith’s plans to remake ‘Old Boy’ thrown into jeopardy

London, Jun 30 (ANI): American film director Steven Spielberg and actor Will Smith’s plans to remake cult Korean movie ‘Old Boy’ have been thrown into jeopardy, as the original makers of the 2003 hit are allegedly not authorised to grant a remake.

According to the Hollywood Reporter, Spielberg and Smith had recently secured the rights to modernise director Park Chan-Wook’s film from producers Show East.

But Show East filmmakers have found themselves at the centre of a lawsuit from Futabasha bosses, the Japanese publishers of the original manga series, who claim the producers were in no position to negotiate with the Hollywood heavyweights and Universal studios.

Seoul-based Show East has since shut down and its executives have ceased all contact with Futabasha, further complicating legal proceedings, which began last week.

“We haven’t been able to confirm that Show East is bankrupt, and at this stage we’re not sure what effect this will have on the legal case,” the Daily Star quoted a spokesperson for Futabasha as saying.

But, Universal bosses are refusing to halt pre-production on Spielberg and Smith’s planned version and have given them the green light to continue work on the forthcoming movie. (ANI)

Michael Jackson lived like king but died awash in debt

Jackson lived like king but died awash in debtLOS ANGELES – Michael Jackson the singer was also Michael Jackson the billion-dollar business.

Yet after selling more than 61 million albums in the U.S. and having a decade-long attraction open at Disney theme parks, the “King of Pop” died Thursday at age 50 reportedly awash in about $400 million in debt, on the cusp of a final comeback after well over a decade of scandal.

The moonwalking pop star drove the growth of music videos, vaulting cable channel MTV into the popular mainstream after its launch in 1981. His 1982 hit “Thriller,” still the second best-selling U.S. album of all time, spawned a John Landis-directed music video that MTV played every hour on the hour.

“The ratings were three or four times what they were normally every time the video came on,” said Judy McGrath, the chairman and CEO of Viacom Inc.’s MTV Networks. “He was inextricably tied to the so-called MTV generation.”

Five years later, “Bad” sold 22 million copies. In 1991, he signed a $65 million recording deal with Sony.

Jackson was so popular that The Walt Disney Co. hitched its wagon to his star in 1986, opening a 3-D movie at its parks called “Captain EO,” executive produced by George Lucas and directed by Francis Ford Coppola. The last attraction in Paris closed 12 years later.

One of Jackson’s shrewdest deals at the height of his fame in 1985 was the $47.5 million acquisition of ATV Music, which owned the copyright to songs written by the Beatles’ John Lennon and Paul McCartney. The catalog provided Jackson a steady stream of income and the ability to afford a lavish lifestyle.

He bought the sprawling Neverland ranch in 1988 for $14.6 million, a fantasy-like 2,500-acre property nestled in the hills of Santa Barbara County’s wine country.

But the bombshell hit in 1993 when he was accused of molesting a 13-year-old boy.

“That kind of represents the beginning of the walk down a tragic path, financially, emotionally, spiritually, psychologically, legally,” said Michael Levine, his publicist at the time.

He settled with the boy’s family, but other accounts of his alleged pedophilia began to emerge.

When he ran into further financial problems, he agreed to a deal with Sony in 1995 to merge ATV with Sony’s library of songs and sold Sony music publishing rights for $95 million. Then in 2001, he used his half of the ATV assets as collateral to secure $200 million in loans from Bank of America.

As his financial problems continued, Jackson began to borrow large sums of money, according to a 2002 lawsuit by Union Finance & Investment Corp. that sought $12 million in unpaid fees and expenses.

In 2003, Jackson was arrested on charges that he molested another 13-year-old boy. The 2005 trial, which ultimately ended in an acquittal, brought to light more details of Jackson’s strained finances.

One forensic accountant testified that the singer had an “ongoing cash crisis” and was spending $20 million to $30 million more per year than he earned.

In March of last year, the singer faced foreclosure on Neverland. He also repeatedly failed to make mortgage payments on a house in Los Angeles that had been used for years by his family.

In addition, Jackson was forced to defend himself against a slew of lawsuits in recent years, including a $7 million claim from Sheik Abdulla bin Hamad Al Khalifa, the second son of the king of Bahrain.

Memorabilia auctions were frequently announced but became the subject of legal wrangling and were often canceled.

Time and again, however, Jackson found a way to wring cash out of high-value assets, borrowing tens of millions at a time or leaning on wealthy friends for advice, if not for money.

Al Khalifa, 33, took Jackson under his wing after his acquittal, moving him to the small Gulf estate and showering him with money.

In his lawsuit, Al Khalifa claimed he gave Jackson millions of dollars to help shore up his finances, cut an album, write an autobiography and subsidize his lifestyle — including more than $300,000 for a “motivational guru.” The lawsuit was settled last year for an undisclosed amount. Neither the album nor book was ever produced.

Another wealthy benefactor came to Jackson’s aid last year as he faced the prospect of losing Neverland in a public auction.

Billionaire Thomas Barrack, chairman and CEO of Los Angeles-based real estate investment firm Colony Capital LLC, agreed to bail out the singer and set up a joint venture with Jackson that took ownership of the vast estate.

Barrack was unavailable for comment Thursday, but referred to the singer in a statement as a “gentle, talented and compassionate man.”

A final piece of the financial jigsaw puzzle fell into place in March, when billionaire Philip Anschutz’ concert promotion company AEG Live announced it would promote 50 shows in London’s O2 arena. Tickets sold out, and the first show of the “This is It” tour was set for July 8.

Jackson, who has won 13 Grammys, hadn’t toured since 1997. His last studio album, “Invincible,” was released in 2001.

But the opening date was later postponed to July 13 and some shows moved back to March 2010, fueling speculation that Jackson was suffering from health ailments that could curtail his comeback bid.

His death, caused by cardiac arrest according to his brother Jermaine, raised the question whether an insurer would refund money to ticketholders. AEG Live did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Jackson was practicing for the concert in Los Angeles at the Staples Center with Kenny Ortega, a choreographer and director of the “High School Musical” movies, who has worked on previous Jackson videos like “Dangerous” in 1993.

“We had a 25-year friendship. This is all too much to comprehend,” Ortega said in a statement. “This was the world’s greatest performer and the world will miss him.”

Source – http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090626/ap_on_bi_ge/us_michael_jackson_inc

Martina Navratilova’s sued by ex-lover for millions

New York, June 25 (ANI): The former lesbian lover of Martina Navratilova has filed a multimillion-dollar lawsuit against the tennis great.

Toni Layton, who claims Navratilova wed her and then cruelly dumped her eight years later, wants a share of the four luxury homes the Wimbledon champ bought during their time together.

The two tied the knot in an unofficial ceremony in New Hampshire, but then moved to Sarasota, Fla., where gay unions aren’t recognized, reports the New York Post.

Layton left her computer salesman hubby, Jeffrey Lambert, for the nine-time Wimbledon champ. (ANI)

Gibson’s pregnant lover files cybersquatter suit

Washington, May 30 (ANI): Mel Gibson’s Russian lover Oksana Grigorieva has filed a lawsuit against a group of Internet entrepreneurs who snapped up her domain name.

The 39-year-old singer has accused bosses of web hosting company DreamHost.com of ‘cybersquatting’ on the site OksanaGrigorieva.com – and making it look like her official website.

The lawsuit was filed this week (ends28May09) in Los Angeles, reports Contactmusic.

Meanwhile Gibson’s adult kids are reportedly planning to hire lawyers to protect their inheritance after knowing that Grigorieva is pregnant.

According to the National Inquirer, Gibson’s twins Edward and Christian, 26, are seeking legal help after he apparently told his seven offspring that he and his new love were expecting a child. (ANI)

Britney sued for running over shutterbug’s foot

London, May 30 (ANI): A grieved paparazzo is suing Britney Spears for rolling over his foot with her Mercedes convertible in 2007.

The accident which apparently happened two hours after Spears learned she had lost custody of her children was caught on video by US site TMZ.

The incident occurred in Beverly Hills when Britney was pulling out of a car park, reports The Sun.

As she tried to navigate her way out of the parking lot, Britney’s car went over Rick Mendoza’s foot.

In the lawsuit, Mendoza said Britney’s people: “should have known…Britney was not in the mental, emotional and/or physical condition to operate the subject motor vehicle in a safe and reasonable manner.” (ANI)

Chris Brown faces lawsuit for assault, battery on photog

Washington, May 28 (ANI): Chris Brown is being taken to court by a photographer who alleges the musician’s involvement in a violent incident.

Robert Rosen has filed a lawsuit against the singer and a L.A. Fitness gym for assault, battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress and false imprisonment in March.

According to TMZ.com, the snapper claimed he had been “shook with incredible force” for trying to take pictures of the 20-year-old star while he was playing basketball at the gym’s court, reports Us magazine.

Brown’s attorney Mark Geragos, however, has slammed the claims, casting doubt on the intentions of Rosen, who had previously sued Pierce Brosnan in late 2007 and lost the case after alleging physical harm by the actor.

Geragos said: “This is a specious and frivolous lawsuit by one of the paparazzi seeking publicity and a payday. [Rosen] has done this before and lost. We will vigorously defend against this.”

Brown was previously taken into custody for allegedly beating his then-girlfriend Rihanna in February.

He pleaded not guilty at his April arraignment and is due to appear in court. (ANI)

Gap-toothed Demi Moore Tweets the ‘missing’ tooth!

London, May 26 (ANI): Twitter addict Demi Moore has uploaded a picture of herself in sunglasses with a missing front tooth in all its glory on the site.

The pic was taken at the dentist’s where Demi was having the tooth replaced.

Demi got herself clicked with a missing tooth before the replacement and shared the comical pic with her Twitter pals.

“Happy to share and always appreciate the opportunity to find humilty!!! Or at least be able to laugh at myself!” The Sun quoted Demi, as stating on her Twitter page.

Demi was recently in news for filing a lawsuit against an Australian publisher Pacific Magazines for printing unauthorised pictures of a private party hosted by her. (ANI)