By Tom McParland | December 18, 2018
A Delaware Superior Court judge has ruled that a clerk for the Court of Chancery in Wilmington was terminated for "just cause" for using her state email account in 2017 to solicit the Facebook CEO's help for an unspecified "product" she was developing.
By Tom McParland | December 18, 2018
A Delaware Superior Court judge has ruled that a clerk for the Court of Chancery in Wilmington was terminated for "just cause" for using her state email account in 2017 to solicit the Facebook CEO's help for an unspecified "product" she was developing.
By Tom McParland | December 18, 2018
Superior Court Judge Andrea L. Rocanelli ruled last week that Donna White, a court clerk for the Court of Chancery in Wilmington, had been terminated for "just cause" for using her state email account in 2017 to solicit Zuckerberg's help for an unspecified "product" that she was developing.
By Jim Turner | December 13, 2018
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission agreed Wednesday to place a number of shark-fishing changes on its February agenda.
By Tony Mauro | Marcia Coyle | December 12, 2018
Akin Gump's Pratik Shah talks about hot-button cases, the growth of Justice Gorsuch and changing dynamics at the high court. Plus: the history of the Supreme Court's annual class photo, and scroll down for our SCOTUS headline roundup. Thanks for reading!
By Tony Mauro | December 10, 2018
The court's action could also signal its future interest in reviewing the "Chevron" doctrine, which called for judicial deference to agency interpretations, also a nemesis for conservatives.
By Jim Saunders | December 4, 2018
Judge Mary Li Creasy, in a 94-page recommended order, traced a three-day chain of events that started when the Hurricane Irma knocked out the air-conditioning system at The Rehabilitation Center at Hollywood Hills.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Francis J. Serbaroli | November 26, 2018
In his Health Law column, Francis J. Serbaroli of Greenberg Traurig discusses the recent decision by New York's Court of Appeals voiding certain regulations issued by the Department of Health pursuant to Governor Andrew Cuomo's Executive Order 38. The court determined that the regulations, which limited the amount of compensation that could be paid to executives of health care providers and managed care plans with significant Medicaid revenues, were the province of the Legislature and not the Department of Health.
By C. Ryan Barber | November 19, 2018
“The U.S. Senate has not consented to Mr. Whitaker serving in any office within the federal government, let alone the highest office of the DOJ," three U.S. Senate Democrats said in a complaint Monday in Washington federal court.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By C. Ryan Barber | November 19, 2018
“The U.S. Senate has not consented to Mr. Whitaker serving in any office within the federal government, let alone the highest office of the DOJ," three U.S. Senate Democrats said in a complaint Monday in Washington federal court.
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