New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Heidi Weintraub and Andrew Moskowitz | March 15, 2019
The district court held that an employer could be held liable for its failure to investigate and remediate its employee's complaint of harassment by a non-employee, and it imposed a standard similar to that which exists under New Jersey law.
By Charles Toutant | March 13, 2019
The New Jersey Supreme Court agreed to hear an appeal of a ruling voiding a lawyer's retainer agreement in a fee-shifting case.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 13, 2019
Johnson & Johnson executives did not appear before the subcommittee looking into the alleged link between talc products and cancer, but the company was an obvious focus of the hearing
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Lewis R. Clayton and Eric Alan Stone | March 12, 2019
Intellectual Property Litigation columnists Lewis R. Clayton and Eric Alan Stone discuss 'BTG Int'l Ltd. v. Amneal Pharm.', in which the Federal Circuit may decide whether §315(e)(2) acts to bar a successful IPR petitioner from asserting in district court the arguments on which it prevailed before the PTAB.
By Colby Hamilton | March 12, 2019
The New York Immigrant Family Unity Project accuses DOJ immigration officials of moving up detainee court hearings without prior notice, jeopardizing their clients' ability to have counsel present.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Howard J. Bashman | March 11, 2019
Today's column is the third and final installment of a three-part series intended to help readers understand and hopefully avoid some of the most troublesome pitfalls lurking in appellate practice.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Peter F. Vaira | March 11, 2019
This column will discuss the situation when a witness who previously testified before a grand jury, when subpoenaed for an additional appearance, can obtain and review the transcript of his previous testimony prior to his next appearance.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Roger Slade | March 11, 2019
To the average Floridian, the term “confession of judgment” is likely to be unfamiliar. One reason for this may be because the use of confessions of judgment, by lenders, is prohibited by Florida statute.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Marie Napoli | March 7, 2019
On Thursday, Feb. 14, 2019, Governor Cuomo signed the Child Victims Act into law, cutting much of the procedural red tape that for years has kept victims from bringing criminal charges and filing civil lawsuits for damages and harms caused by abuse and assault on minor children.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 6, 2019
Purdue Pharma has sought to delay a May 28 trial against the Oklahoma AG, citing a “belated tidal wave of documents,” but the move comes amid reports of its possible Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
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