August 11, 2022 | Daily Business Review
EPA Setback: Is Supreme Court Now More Willing to Override Executive Branch Decision-Making?Less obviously, it is potentially a transformative decision reducing the power of the president to create rules for industry that have political and business consequences.
By Kendall Coffey
7 minute read
March 08, 2022 | Daily Business Review
What Florida Attorneys Need to Know About Data Breaches, Duty to InformDespite the pervasive realities, no comprehensive federal scheme has been enacted to broadly formulate and require preventative measures.
By Kendall Coffey
6 minute read
March 04, 2022 | Daily Business Review
'Nobody Wanted the War': Russian-Speaking Attorneys Offering Pro Bono Consultations to Ukrainian Refugees"Here, Ukrainians understand that almost all Russians are against the war. But many Russians have a sense of guilt for something they don't support," the president of the Russian American Bar Association said.
By Kendall Coffey
6 minute read
May 04, 2015 | Daily Business Review
Dershowitz's Attorney Comments on Reputational DamageMiami attorney Kendall Coffey, who represents Harvard law professor emeritus Alan Dershowitz, expounds on the legal standards for reputational damage.
By Kendall Coffey
4 minute read
May 04, 2015 | Daily Business Review
Dershowitz's Attorney Comments on Reputational DamageMiami attorney Kendall Coffey, who represents Harvard law professor emeritus Alan Dershowitz, expounds on the legal standards for reputational damage.
By Kendall Coffey
4 minute read
August 22, 2012 | Law.com
Underserved Middle Class Could Sustain Underemployed Law GraduatesAs the economy continues to inflict financial distress upon many lawyers -- excruciatingly so for graduating law students -- tens of millions of Americans, many in the middle class, need attorneys but cannot afford them. This unmet need could sustain jobless lawyers, writes Coffey Burlington partner Kendall Coffey.
By Kendall Coffey
5 minute read
August 06, 2007 | National Law Journal
Milestones in U.S. historyAs dog-fighting defendant and football quarterback Michael Vick is learning, scrambling away from the feds becomes even tougher when they play "Let's Make A Deal" with a co-defendant who agrees to testify as a prosecution witness. The cooperating witness' art of turning state's evidence has a rich history, ranging from the Salem Witch Trials to Jack Abramoff.
By Kendall Coffey / Special to The National Law Journal
5 minute read
August 10, 2007 | New Jersey Law Journal
Milestones in CooperationThe cooperating witness's art of "turning state's evidence" has a tradition-rich history.
By Kendall Coffey
5 minute read
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