Could be verse: poetry ripped from the headlines
By JAMES PARKER | December 16, 2008
Lines in defense of Judge Roy Pearson, who lost a $54 million lawsuit against his dry cleaner and has now lost his job
Misunderstood man of the law, I salute you — a Solomon scorned by the throng,
Who gravely determined that they were in breach who had cleaned your trousers wrong.
Your satisfaction was “guaranteed.” Yet you were not satisfied.
And now, though your ass be grass, your principle stands: clean and dried.
Related:
Frontier justice, High Noon for Cabral, Suspect speaks; victim’s family begins $1-million-plus lawsuit, More
- Frontier justice
Log on. Check your Gmail. Click the URLs your friend just sent. One’s a blog entry about electronic voting machines, the other is a news story about warrantless wiretapping. Grit your teeth.
- High Noon for Cabral
Mixed messages marked a civil jury’s verdict last week ordering Suffolk County Sheriff Andrea J. Cabral’s office to pay fired nurse Sheila Porter $360,000 in compensation plus an additional $250,000 in “punitive damages.”
- Suspect speaks; victim’s family begins $1-million-plus lawsuit
The widow of Sheldon Weinstein, the Maine State Prison inmate who died in April several days after allegedly being beaten by inmates, has taken the first step toward filing a wrongful-death lawsuit against prison guards, Department of Corrections “policy-making personnel,” and prison medical-care providers.
- Biolab follies
In the beginning — way back in the fall of 2003, when the “War on Terror” was still young — the notion that anything could derail the Boston University biolab seemed absurd.
- Free culture: what it is, why it matters
“Copyright law has successfully stopped artists in the past from releasing sample-based works, but I don't think anything could stop me from making it," says Gregg Gillis, a/k/a Girl Talk.
- Battling Scientology
In a world wracked with uncertainty, there is at least one thing you can bet on: pick a fight with the Church of Scientology, and its leaders will fight back — always with vigor, often with a vengeance, and sometimes with litigation that can be long and costly.
- Timeline of events
How the ISBCC turned from a place of worship to a symbol of controversy
- The recording industry vs. free speech
Download of Nonsense
- Ring of fire
An ugly squabble between the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the nation’s biggest phone companies has, in one nasty blow, recast the image of all the entities involved.
- Repro Rights
Unprotected sex, under any circumstances, can be scary, embarrassing, and confusing enough. Three local women are suing Wal-Mart for making it even worse.
- State: One Santa okay; another no way
Maine regulators have refused to approve an English beer’s label featuring Santa Claus holding a beer, saying it makes the product attractive to children.
- Less

Topics:
Lifestyle Features
, Trials, Civil Trials