By Celia Ampel | August 25, 2017
Before his death, Ultra co-founder Alex Omes argued his shares of the company were worth millions.
By BRIAN BAXTER | August 24, 2017
Terrell “Terry” Iandiorio, a 46-year-old litigation and government enforcement counsel at Ropes & Gray in Boston, drowned in a rip current last week in Nantucket, a popular island vacation spot off the coast of Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
By Celia Ampel | August 21, 2017
The winning plaintiffs attorneys included a contestant on the most recent season of "The Bachelorette."
By Celia Ampel | August 18, 2017
The work ethic a Kelley/Uustal attorney learned from her early days on a horse farm put her on a path to success.
By Celia Ampel | August 17, 2017
A bar committee recommended litigation against Coral Gables startup Tikd for the unlicensed practice of law.
By Commentary by Logan E. Gans | August 17, 2017
Few, if any, of us will ever have the good fortune about to befall Floyd "Money" Mayweather—a $100-plus million payday for about an hour's worth of work. But all too many entrepreneurs, business owners and "working folks" regularly face the other side of the Mayweather coin—failing to pay taxes promptly and owing onerous sums to the IRS, writes Logan F. Gans.
By B. Colby Hamilton | August 16, 2017
A former IT employee of an unnamed multinational bank is accused by federal authorities of running a $5 million insider trading scheme with six other defendants, according to parallel suits filed in Manhattan federal court Wednesday.
By Sue Reisinger | August 16, 2017
The public university denies a request for Richard Spencer to speak on the Gainesville campus next month.
By Commentary by Richard B. Schwamm | August 14, 2017
Trial lawyers are now turning to different types of "digital justice" to assist in the litigation of multimillion dollar lawsuits to achieve the best financial result for their clients. While courtroom technology has been used in the past, many lawyers are now pushing the envelope to both educate and impress jurors, writes Richard B. Schwamm.
By Commentary by Dan Small and Michael E. Hantman | August 9, 2017
All seasoned trial lawyers have experienced a client being facetious and losing composure. While there's no way to completely avoid this, there is one way to ameliorate it: conduct a realistic and prolonged mock cross examination of your own client. No amount of discussion can fully explain the question-and-answer process. Like anything difficult and unnatural, doing it right takes practice, write Dan Small and Michael E. Hantman.
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