By Celia Ampel | December 27, 2017
Corporate lawyer Drew Altman races cars on the weekends — a high-stakes way of practicing the focus, discipline and decision-making that's served him well in his career.
By Susan DeSantis | December 27, 2017
Richard Stehl, the chairman of Otterbourg, a 50-attorney law firm, speaks to the New York Law Journal about the advantages and challenges of being a smaller law firm in a city where everything is supersized.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Tom McParland | December 22, 2017
Despite an unusual level of disagreement between Delaware's Supreme and Chancery courts in 2017, a sense of direction seems has emerged as to some hotly debated areas of corporate law heading into the New Year.
By Monika Mesa | December 20, 2017
The former CEO of Patriot National is blaming the law firms for its impending bankruptcy.
By Brian Baxter | December 20, 2017
At least 10 large law firms are advising on four M&A deals announced within the past month involving major restaurant chains and snack companies.
By Anna Zhang | December 20, 2017
Paul Weiss, Skadden and Latham are advising as Tencent tries to up its online retail game.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By David E. Kahen | December 20, 2017
In this Taxation column, David E. Kahen writes: A common example of a mismatch of character of income and loss involves the exercise of compensatory stock options and immediate sale of the stock so acquired. The potential for both ordinary income and capital loss in such situations is illustrated by the recent Court of Federal Claims decision in 'Hann v. United States'.
By MP McQueen | December 19, 2017
John Carlin, former assistant U.S. attorney general in charge of the National Security Division, who is now chairman of the global risk and crisis management team at Morrison & Foerster, talks with the National Law Journal about proposed legislation to overhaul the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States' review process.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | December 19, 2017
In a closely watched case that waded into the murky ethics of business arrangements between lawyers and nonlawyers, a majority of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court could agree on only one thing: fee-splitting arrangements between lawyers and nonlawyers are not per se unenforceable just because they violate attorney ethics rules.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Elizabeth Jaikaran | December 19, 2017
Elizabeth Jaikaran looks at the counseling issues at play when cryptocurrency is used to fund real estate transactions, and discusses the first wholly Bitcoin-funded real estate transaction, which closed in September of this year.
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