By Meghan Tribe | January 4, 2018
Akerman, Duane Morris, Goldberg Segalla and Steptoe & Johnson start 2018 by making several lateral hires from the soon-to-be-shuttered Sedgwick.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Katie Phang | January 4, 2018
There is an old adage: “Pigs get fat while hogs get slaughtered.” In the case of two of Mattress Firm's former vice presidents, Colliers International Atlanta, one of its former executives, and several developers nationwide, the outcome of a recent lawsuit will determine whether and how badly they will be punished for their alleged greed.
By Jason Grant | January 3, 2018
Justice Saliann Scarpulla has found there was no danger of irreparable injury to the plaintiffs, a group of dissenting limited partners in Starrett City who sued claiming the sales price was too low.
By Ben Hancock | January 3, 2018
After facing allegations from Uber that it nurtured online advertising fraud to extract millions of dollars, the global advertising firm Fetch Media Ltd. has fired back with a new lawsuit that accuses Uber of forum-shopping and evading its bills.
By Sue Reisinger | January 3, 2018
Veteran in-house counsel Arnold Pinkston began work this week as the new chief legal officer at CoreLogic Inc., an Irvine, California-based property and data technology company.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Expert Opinion
By Harry N. Mazadoorian | January 3, 2018
Resisting regulation when it is truly needed would put many disputants at a distinct disadvantage. But overregulation would sap ADR of the very vitality which has been its lifeblood: party determination and control.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | January 3, 2018
2018 is expected to a busy year in both the courts and the state Legislature as issues like legalizing recreational marijuana to whether the state's education funding formula is fair to both students in suburban schools and their urban counterparts play out.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Lazaro I. Vazquez and Francis E. Rodriguez | January 3, 2018
The Israel Anti-Boycott Act (S.720 and H.R.1697), a bill in Congress attracting debate, is considered by some to protect the interests of the United States and by others to violate the First Amendment right to free speech. Regardless of how the proposed legislation pans out, it is casting a spotlight on existing U.S. anti-boycott laws and regulations that are often overlooked when structuring cross-border transactions. These laws require serious consideration.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Lizzy McLellan | January 2, 2018
The firm has added to its private client, litigation and public and project finance practices.
By Greg Land | January 2, 2018
U.S. District Judge Thomas Thrash dismissed a lawsuit claiming a man defrauded FedEx by accessing a corporate shipping account offering discounted rates, then charging third parties higher rates to ship items.
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