By MP McQueen | April 19, 2018
After Attorney General Eric Schneiderman's Investor Protection Bureau sent letters and questionnaires this week to 13 cryptocurrency trading platforms seeking information, at least one said it won't comply, and a financial services regulation lawyer called the attorney general's action “extraordinary.”
By Todd B. Scherwin, Wendy McGuire Coats and Karl R. Lindegren | April 18, 2018
Service advisers are exempt from FLSA overtime requirements.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael Slocum | April 17, 2018
From 'Browning-Ferris' to 'Hy-Brand' and beyond
By New Jersey State Bar Association | April 16, 2018
NJSBA lobbies Washington on legal services funding
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | April 12, 2018
The Commonwealth Court has ruled in a case of first impression that chiropractors who treat workers' compensation claimants are not entitled to payment for routine office visits in addition to payment for procedures that are performed during those visits.
By MP McQueen | April 11, 2018
The landmark Fair Housing Act was signed by President Lyndon Johnson 50 years ago. Marking the occasion, The National Law Journal asked Ajmel Quereshi, senior counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund Inc., to list five major milestones in the legal fight against housing discrimination.
By Kristen Rasmussen | April 11, 2018
HHS Principal Deputy General Counsel Heather Flick will fill the role until that position is filled permanently. She previously served as HHS' acting general counsel.
By MP McQueen | April 10, 2018
Federal agencies recovered more than $2.6 billion in health care fraud and abuse judgments, settlements and impositions in 2017, according to a new annual report from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Justice.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | April 9, 2018
The court found Urbanski, who had been first assistant under the county's last elected district attorney, failed to meet the law's residency requirement before he took the oath of office at the beginning of the year.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Victoria Hudgins | April 6, 2018
The Commonwealth Court has ruled that a claimant who was laid off from his full-time union job should not be denied unemployment benefits based on a single shift at a dog day care for which he earned $74.39.
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McCarter & English, LLP is actively seeking a litigation associate for its office located in Hartford, CT. One to three years of experie...
Borteck & Czapek, P.C., based in Florham Park, is a boutique estates and trusts law firm specializing in estate planning and administrat...
Gwinnett County State Court is seeking an attorney to assist the Judge by conducting a variety of legal research, analysis, and document pre...