By Jenna Greene | August 17, 2018
Miguel Estrada and Robert Weigel's client wasn't the first company to have its assets seized by the government of Venezuela—but the Gibson Dunn duo was the first to come up with a viable way for them to collect what they're owed.
By Greg Land | August 16, 2018
In a largely blacked-out petition, Robert Cheeley asked a Fulton judge to vacate an arbitration award in several fee disputes with his former firm, Butler Wooten & Peak.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | August 15, 2018
After nearly 25 years on the bench handling numerous high-profile cases and becoming a part of the court's leadership, McInerney is gearing up to take that expertise to JAMS where she will do private alternative dispute resolution.
By John Council | August 13, 2018
In what appears to be a novel move in Texas employment litigation, two Houston lawyers are seeking to keep a sexual harassment case out of arbitration by arguing that resolving the legal dispute in private violates public policy in the #MeToo era.
By Ross Todd | August 8, 2018
A federal judge in Oakland has turned back a whistleblower's request to toss an arbitration award that was based in part on the fact that the defendant's lead lawyer at Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe joined JAMS while the case was pending.
By Caroline Spiezio | August 7, 2018
It looks as though AFAs aren't just for outside counsel anymore. They're now a part of the arbitration process for at least one major ADR provider.
By John Kang | August 7, 2018
Chan Leng Sun joins Essex Court Chambers Duxton, which was set up last year and houses a handful of top lawyers, including former Singapore Attorney General V.K. Rajah.
By Angela Turturro | August 6, 2018
In this Special Report: "Good Faith Negotiations at Mediation," "Fending Off Cyberattacks in International Arbitration," "Blurred Lines: Rethinking the Issue of Consent by Non-Signatories," "Corruption as a Defense in Investment Treaty Arbitration" and "Efficiency or Fairness? ADR May Be the 21st Century Equivalent to the Rise of Equity."
By Ross Todd | August 3, 2018
A California appellate court tossed a defense win for JPMorgan Chase Bank finding the arbitrator in the case below failed to make required disclosures when she signed on to handle at least four separate arbitrations involving Chase's law firm, Seyfarth Shaw.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Robert J. Rock | August 3, 2018
The move away from the courts is based on efficiency rather than fairness. The lack of efficiency combined with the high cost of going to court, contribute, in in large measure, to the nation's “disappearing” jury trials.
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