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$9.1M Settlement: School District Agrees to Pay for Failure to Prevent Bullying
"When the harassment is during school hours, and after school hours, and it involves a student, that student has to be protected. Then it's the school's responsibility to stop it," plaintiffs lawyer Bruce Nagel said.Prosecutors Seek Sam Bankman-Fried's Detention After Leak of Diary Entries
U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan of the Southern District of New York said he would impose an interim gag order on Bankman-Fried to give the parties time to file briefs on the question of detention. The final filing is due Aug. 3.Oregon, Delaware Join Data Privacy Law Patchwork, With Expanded Definitions of Sensitive Data
Despite following a common model, the Oregon Consumer Privacy Act and the Delaware Personal Data Privacy Act have broadened definitions of sensitive data, fewer exemptions than prior bills, and a California-like definition of a sale.Former Unisys GC Moves Up the Road to Avantor
Claudius Sokenu, ranked by Savoy as one of the most influential Black executives in corporate America, said he was drawn to Avantor's mission of scientific innovation.View more book results for the query "*"
Judge's Covington Order May Have 'Chilling Effects' for Attorney-Client Relations
The decision could have lasting consequences in "eroding the principle that the attorney-client relationship is confidential," said a law professor.Because Clients Asked, California Law Firm Moves into Texas With Houston Office
San Diego-based Tyson & Mendes, which opened the Houston office this month, plans to soon add another location in Texas.A 'Wild Goose Chase'?: Smartmatic Lawyers Seek 'Evasive' Recordings From Fox in Defamation Lawsuit
"Fox has engaged in a pattern of conduct throughout discovery that boils down to a game of 'catch me if you can,'" Smartmatic's lawyers allege. They're asking a judge to force Fox to sign an affidavit detailing search procedures and swearing additional records could not be found.Texas, Arkansas, FTC Get Injunction Against Frisco Ponzi Scheme Defendants
"During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Moores promised to 'bless' participants with large sums of money in exchange for up-front monetary contributions. The scam falsely promised investment returns as high as 800 percent," the Texas Office of Attorney General stated.Trending Stories
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