NEXT
Search Results

0 results for 'undefined'

You can use to get even better search results
June 21, 2011 | The Legal Intelligencer

Who Can Complain?

For decades, state and federal dockets have been filled with lawsuits involving claims related to the manufacture, distribution, and use of materials containing asbestos
10 minute read
September 28, 2009 | National Law Journal

VERDICTS & SETTLEMENTS

7 minute read
October 16, 2008 | National Law Journal

Kirkland launches Asia private equity funds team

Kirkland & Ellis is setting up an Asian private equity funds practice with the relocation of two partners, including London partner Justin Dolling, who will move in January to Hong Kong, where he will be joined by New York partner Albert Cho. Although Kirkland's Hong Kong office has helped clients with fund formation matters, the pair will be the office's first partners dedicated to the practice.
2 minute read
August 02, 2006 | National Law Journal

Little New Ground Broken

It is of course too soon to make judgments about the impact of the new justices on the court's decisions or its docket. But a review of the business-related cases from last term suggests that the court's more significant decisions tended to be both routine and noncontroversial.
11 minute read
March 22, 2004 | Law.com

News Briefs

A roundup of legal news items.
3 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Pennsylvania Causes of Action, 12th Edition Authors: GAETAN J. ALFANO, RONALD J. SHAFFER, JOSHUA C. COHAN View this Book

View more book results for the query "*"

March 09, 2001 | Law.com

Orrick Tweaks Pay Scale to Satisfy East, West Associates

When Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe's New York competitors gave its associates year-end bonuses, the San Francisco firm with a growing East Coast presence responded West Coast style. The firm, which for the first time in 2000 had more attorneys in its New York office than in its San Francisco headquarters, gave out additional bonuses at the end of the year to help keep its New York lawyers happy.
4 minute read
September 18, 2006 | Daily Report Online

Former Enron official Delainey sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison for insider trading

HOUSTON AP - A former high-ranking Enron Corp. trading and retail energy executive was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison Monday for insider trading in connection with the energy company's financial collapse.David Delainey, who pleaded guilty in October 2003, had admitted to participating in schemes to manipulate earnings to please Wall Street.
4 minute read
January 26, 2004 | Law.com

This Week's Winners and Losers

The title says it all.
2 minute read
October 01, 2009 | New York Law Journal

Surrogate's Court Surrogate Johnson Surrogate Lopez Torres

10 minute read
September 15, 2008 | National Law Journal

Nudity and the SEC

"Naked" short selling, as opposed to "covered" short selling, can be defined as the selling of an equity security that the seller neither owns, nor has borrowed, nor has arranged to borrow. The practice is discouraged, but not prohibited by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Indeed, the level of current discouragement is probably accurately described as only a mild chill. Still, the SEC is considering proposed rules to deepen the chill that "nudist" short sellers must endure to engage in an activity that seems to be increasingly popular.
9 minute read