New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Asim Rehman | September 25, 2024
Given the broad scope and the impact of its decisions, the work of the Office of Administrative Trials and Hearings has great relevance to the New York legal community, the court's Chief Administrative Law Judge writes.
By Mason Lawlor | September 20, 2024
The Federal Trade Commission failed to adjust its "shotgun approach" in aggressively pursuing claims against the client despite the emerging evidence he did not directly participate in unfair and deceptive practices, said attorney Charles Hoffecker.
By John C. Coffee Jr. | September 18, 2024
The new DOJ Pilot Program varies significantly from the SEC's prior program, and these differences raise fundamental questions: What will most encourage whistleblowers to come forward? What will best motivate defendants to self-report their criminal involvement? How will these new DOJ procedures affect the standard Deferred Prosecution Agreement?
By ALM Staff | September 17, 2024
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decisions editors.
By Michael A. Mora | September 17, 2024
"The line between innovation and a potential securities violation remains murky," said Helen Gugel, a partner at Am Law 10 firm Ropes & Gray who is not involved in the matter.
By Chris O'Malley | September 16, 2024
"The pushback doesn't change what the commission is going to do. But I think it does make staff and the majority button things up a bit more," said John Villafranco, a partner at Kelley Drye Warren.
By Kat Black | September 13, 2024
The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York came in second with 173 trade secret cases filed.
By Lisa Willis | September 11, 2024
Robert "Bob" Jarvis, an ethics professor at Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad College of Law, reminded lawyers to be mindful of how generative artificial intelligence may compromise client confidentiality.
By Chris O'Malley | September 9, 2024
The e-commerce giant's beef stems from an administrative injunction the NLRB filed against it in March 2022, about a week before workers at a Staten Island, New York, Amazon warehouse voted to unionize.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By William F. Johnson | September 4, 2024
Even if the President could entirely remove and/or reappoint the Chair or other Commissioners, the President would still have to meet the statutory requirements regarding political party affiliations and staggered terms.
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