By Andrew Denney | March 29, 2018
The government alleges the borrowers who took out the loans were less creditworthy than Barclays led investors and rating agencies to believe, and that more than half of the loans defaulted.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | March 28, 2018
In a loss for the struggling taxi industry, a federal appeals court has ruled that Uber's entry into the Philadelphia transportation market did not run afoul of antitrust laws.
By Andrew Denney | January 11, 2018
A federal judge in Manhattan has ruled that personal injury claims by a group of Central and South Americans who say they were sickened by pesticides used at banana plantations decades ago but who were absent from a similar case filed in 1993 were not barred by New York's statute of limitations.
By Greg Land | January 11, 2018
Lawyers for the owner of the Emerald Princess II were denied summary judgment on their argument that a one-year statute of limitations printed on the plaintiff's boarding pass shielded them from liability.
By Scott Graham | December 29, 2017
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has requested briefing in two cases that could flesh out the Supreme Court's game-changing patent venue holding.
By Colby Hamilton | Cogan Schneier | November 20, 2017
Federal appellate courts in California and New York saw the Trump administration attempt to stop the push by plaintiffs for an expanded record production related to the administration's decision to end DACA.
By Marcia Coyle | November 13, 2017
There is no question that financial trader and inventor Fane Lozman has been a thorn in the side of the city council of Riviera Beach, Florida, for more than a decade. And now—for the second time in five years—his legal battles with the city have captured the attention of the U.S. Supreme Court.
By Commentary by Dan Small and Michael E. Hantman | October 9, 2017
In the Harrison Ford film “Clear and Present Danger,” the drama opens soon after the murder of American businessman Peter Hardin for allegedly stealing $650 million from a drug cartel.
By Katheryn Tucker | Daily Report | October 6, 2017
Gay rights advocates are cheering an unpublished opinion from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit overturning a verdict because…
By Commentary by David B. Haber and Lauren S. Fallick | September 20, 2017
We are now dealing with the aftermath of Hurricane Irma. Many attorneys and litigants lost—and some remain without—power in their homes and offices, and could be dealing with temporary and permanent loss of property, including, potentially, electronic and paper files, write David B. Haber and Lauren S. Fallick.
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