The Legal Intelligencer | Event
By Amanda O'Brien | March 29, 2023
Attorneys shouldn't fear having their actions thrown back at a corporation if it becomes a defendant. "Your job as a lawyer is to distinguish things," Brian Savage argued at a forum hosted by Dechert.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Carl W. Hittinger and Alyse F. Stach | March 24, 2023
Companies would be wise to review their personal device and corporate chat preservation policies and ensure they have the ability to preserve such information in the event of a government investigation or civil antitrust litigation.
National Law Journal | Profile
By Christine Schiffner | March 22, 2023
"I think the legal field has become a profession of specialists." The key for young lawyers is to "get a real gut instinct for where their strengths are, what they really want to see themselves doing" and focus on those areas.
By Mason Lawlor | March 21, 2023
The judge finds there is "no question" that transferring the Department of Justice action would result in "significant delays" in litigation.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | March 16, 2023
U.S. District Judge Karen Marston granted the plaintiff's motion for approval Wednesday, which also included an award of $7 million in attorney fees and $2.3 million in costs.
By Ross Todd | March 15, 2023
Sysco last month fired Boies Schiller Flexner partner Scott Gant after the company feuded with Burford Capital, the litigation funder financing the antitrust litigation Gant was handling.
By Dan Roe | March 14, 2023
During a legal career that spanned 55 years, Flexner helped break up AT&T while at the DOJ and went on to advise on the country's biggest mergers in private practice.
By Justin Henry | March 14, 2023
Kenneth Field spent a decade at the firm after a spell at FTC's Bureau of Competition during the Bush and Obama administrations.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Gerald A. Stein and Frank Joranko | March 13, 2023
As shown in recent cases, parties successfully have fought off merger challenges in court when they can show that the government's theoretical antitrust case is not supported by market realities. Demonstrating market realities is critical to both the government and the parties in antitrust merger litigation.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz | March 13, 2023
The Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice had recently made front page news when it brought a lawsuit against one of the biggest technology companies in the world. Publications like the New York Times marveled at the unusual attention antitrust was getting, noting the "new wave of anti-trustism" that had swept the country.
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