By Michael Booth | April 25, 2018
A Texas appeals court has overturned $150,000 in sanctions, remanded for reconsideration an award of $375,383 in attorney fees, and vacated nonmonetary sanctions imposed by the trial judge on the operator of website purportedly aimed at stamping online bullying and other more lurid practices.
By Colby Hamilton | April 25, 2018
A 2015 article by The Wall Street Journal said Diosdado Cabello, described as the second-most powerful man in Venezuela, was being investigated by U.S. officials for turning the country into a global hub for cocaine trafficking and money laundering.
By Jenna Greene | April 24, 2018
Anti-SLAPP suits can be deeply unsatisfying, as two recent cases—one involving fitness guru Richard Simmons, the other a man on a self-proclaimed mission to stop revenge porn and cyber-bullying—make clear.
By Lidia Dinkova | April 24, 2018
MacCullough led a team of Greenberg Traurig attorneys to close financing for SBA Communications Corp.
By Katheryn Tucker | April 23, 2018
An appellate lawyer recently had an opportunity to turn the tables on a panel of judges at the State Bar of Georgia headquarters building in Atlanta for a conference on “Handling Big Cases."
Connecticut Law Tribune | Event
By Michael Marciano | April 20, 2018
If the thought of being sexually assaulted in your home in the middle of the night by a masked intruder sounds incomprehensibly traumatic, imagine if the assault was only the beginning of a yearslong period of shame, abuse and neglect brought on by people whose jobs are to protect you.
By Andrew Denney | April 19, 2018
The Fearless Girl is getting out of the path of the Charging Bull, which may also allow the New York City government and the owner of the Fearless Girl to sidestep a lawsuit.
By Tony Mauro | April 19, 2018
The film recounts the 2005 eminent domain case "Kelo v. New London."
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Tom McParland | April 17, 2018
A Taiwanese technology company on Monday accused Google Inc. in Delaware federal court of infringing two motion-sensing patents with its line of Pixel cellphones.
By Sue Reisinger | April 17, 2018
The move was spurred by the government's assertion that, contrary to terms of a 2017 settlement, ZTE paid full bonuses to employees that had engaged in illegal conduct and failed to issue letters of reprimand.
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