Denise Cote
Summary
Denise Cote (born 1946) is a United States federal judge.Cote was born in St. Cloud, Minnesota. She received a B.A. from St. Mary's College in 1968 and an M.A. in history from Columbia University in 1969, after which she taught U.S. history, world history, and African-American history at the Convent of the Sacred Heart, a school in Manhattan. Cote then attended Columbia Law School, where she was Notes & Comments Editor of the Columbia Law Review, and she received her law degree (J.D.) in 1975. After law school, Cote clerked for the Hon. Jack B. Weinstein, U.S. District Judge in the Eastern District of New York, in 1975-76.
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Judge rules Apple CEO Tim Cook must testify in ebook antitrust case
Apple CEO Tim Cook will have to testify in the the Department of Justice’s ebook antitrust case, federal judge Denise Cote ruled Wednesday, according to a report in Reuters.
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Apple CEO Cook must testify in e-books antitrust case: judge
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Apple Inc Chief Executive Tim Cook must sit for a deposition in the U. S. government's lawsuit against the company over alleged price-fixing in the e-book market, a judge ruled on Wednesday.
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Publisher Macmillan settles fed's e-book charges
The book publishing industry's battle with the U. S. Department of Justice has ended, as Macmillan became the fifth and final literary house to agree to settle charges that it had taken part, along with Apple Inc. , in an e-books price fixing conspiracy.
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Apple and publishers subpoena Amazon in ebook pricing case
Apple wants the Department of Justice to turn over the interviews it conducted with Amazon employees as part of the ebook pricing lawsuit. In an August filing, Apple wrote, ”Amazon was the driving force behind the Government’s investigation, and it told a story to the Government that has yet to be scrutinized.
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States’ ebook settlement: Preliminary approval, and a 2013 hearing
Federal district judge Denise Cote has preliminarily approved (PDF) the states’ $69 million ebook pricing settlement with Hachette, HarperCollins and Simon & Schuster.
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Ebook case: more poetry and no refund for the judge
In a case that’s already featured a comic strip and a full-length Emily Dickinson poem, a lawyer is hoping another line of poetry will persuade a judge to put the brakes on a settlement intended to shake up the ebook market.
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What the DOJ settlement means for ebook prices now
On Thursday, U. S. District Judge Denise Cote approved a proposed settlement put forth by the Department of Justice to resolve allegations that three publishers had colluded with Apple to fix ebook prices. Here’s what will happen next.
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Lawyer files Hail Mary request to stop ebook price changes
Just days before a court ruling forces major publishers to tear up ebook contracts, a prominent attorney has asked to suspend the proceedings until an appeals court can weigh in on a price-fixing settlement between the Justice Department and three publishers.
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Breaking: Judge approves e-book price-fixing settlement
In a surprise move, a federal court abruptly approved a settlement between the Department of Justice and three publishers that will resolve a controversy over e-book pricing.
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Court lets Authors Guild, attorney weigh in on Apple ebooks case
As U. S. District Judge Denise Cote prepares to issue a verdict on the Department of Justice’s proposed ebook pricing settlement with three publishers, she has granted two parties that oppose the settlement — the Authors Guild and attorney and licensing expert Bob Kohn — permission to weigh in as amici curiae, or “friends of the court.

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