Deniable litigation: Difference between revisions
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[[Corporate assassination (nonfiction)]] is the best-known example, but deniable litigation is profitable in fields from medical explosives to nuclear materials handling. | [[Corporate assassination (nonfiction)]] is the best-known example, but deniable litigation is profitable in fields from medical explosives to nuclear materials handling. | ||
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== Fiction cross-reference == | == Fiction cross-reference == |
Revision as of 10:31, 22 June 2016
In law, deniable litigation is the practice of conducting disputes such that one, some, or all parties may deny involvement.
Corporate assassination (nonfiction) is the best-known example, but deniable litigation is profitable in fields from medical explosives to nuclear materials handling.