February 05, 2010 | Daily Report Online
Financial scandal gives 'Damages' dramatic payoffNEW YORK AP - Thank Bernie Madoff.After two seasons plumbing other areas of sin and corporate corruption, the new season of FX's legal thriller "Damages" stands to make a killing in investment rip-offs.Why not A Bernie Madoff-scope Ponzi scheme destroys people while driving some of them to destroy others.
By FRAZIER MOORE
5 minute read
June 04, 2013 | New York Law Journal
Causation Issues With Delay in Diagnosing Cancer CasesIn their Medical Malpractice column, Thomas A. Moore, senior partner at Kramer, Dillof, Livingston & Moore, and Matthew Gaier, a partner at the firm. write that the determination of whether diagnosis at or near the time of the malpractice would have saved the patient's life can be dependent upon many factors.
By Thomas A. Moore and Matthew Gaier
12 minute read
April 21, 2010 | Daily Report Online
Airlines lose $1.7 billion, ash blame game beginsBERLIN AP - Airlines lost at least $1.7 billion in revenue during the volcanic ash crisis, an industry group said Wednesday as the debate heated up over European governments' handling of a week of airspace closures.Planes were flying into all of Europe's top airports - London's Heathrow, Paris' Charles de Gaulle and Frankfurt.
By JUERGEN BAETZ and MATT MOORE
7 minute read
February 26, 2008 | Daily Report Online
German prosecutors net 163 people in expanding tax investigationBy MATT MOORE
4 minute read
January 28, 2011 | Daily Report Online
Crisis panel: Banker pay helped hobble economyBy Hugh Son and Michael J. Moore
4 minute read
February 11, 2009 | Daily Report Online
JPMorgan cracks down on unused creditJPMorgan Chase Co., Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. are among lenders cutting back on $1.6 trillion of credit lines as they face increased demand for loans that threaten to drain capital. Banks used loan negotiations with retailers Rite Aid Corp. and Ethan Allen Interiors Inc., and with homebuilder Ryland Group Inc.
By Michael J. Moore and Pierre Paulden
7 minute read
June 30, 2010 | Daily Report Online
Hiring picks up at Wall Street firmsLeverage is back on Wall Street-and this time it's the bankers who have it.Firms are adding jobs for the first time in two years, rebuilding businesses cut during the financial crisis and offering guaranteed payouts to lure top bankers. In New York, 6,800 financial-industry positions were added from the end of February through May, the largest three-month increase since 2008, according to the New York State Department of Labor.
By Michael J. Moore
7 minute read
August 11, 2011 | National Law Journal
New lawyer training programs often fall shortComprehensive, jurisdiction-specific practical skills training programs for new lawyers almost universally do not exist. But law firms are not to blame.
By Desiree Moore
5 minute read
March 18, 2013 | Daily Report Online
What to expect in an EEOC systemic discrimination caseThe Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is the federal agency charged with enforcing the nation's employment discrimination laws, which forbid employers from making employment decisions on the basis of protected characteristics such as race, gender, age, religion and disability.
By Michael Johnston and Rebecca Cole Moore, Special to the Daily Report
8 minute read
December 12, 2001 | Law.com
Credit Suisse IPO Settlement May Hurt It in Civil SuitsCredit Suisse First Boston is negotiating a multimillion-dollar settlement with government regulators regarding its allocations of initial public offerings. Though a settlement was widely expected after the U.S. Attorney's Office dropped its investigation of CSFB in November, it doesn't mean CSFB is out of the woods. The investment bank still faces nearly 1,000 civil lawsuits, which could gain credibility from the deal.
By Heidi Moore
4 minute read