By C. Ryan Barber | January 3, 2019
Lieberman's disclosure registering him as a lobbyist for the Chinese telecom ZTE put a fresh spotlight on the blurry lines that define reportable lobbying activity in the Washington influence market.
By C. Ryan Barber | January 3, 2019
Lieberman's disclosure registering him as a lobbyist for the Chinese telecom ZTE put a fresh spotlight on the blurry lines that define reportable lobbying activity in the Washington influence market.
By C. Ryan Barber | January 3, 2019
Lieberman's disclosure registering him as a lobbyist for the Chinese telecom ZTE put a fresh spotlight on the blurry lines that define reportable lobbying activity in the Washington influence market.
By R. Robin McDonald | January 3, 2019
Bondurant said he found the seeds of a viable constitutional claim against partisan gerrymandering in an argument put forth by Justice Anthony Kennedy in 2004.
By Tony Mauro | Marcia Coyle | January 3, 2019
O'Melveny's Walter Dellinger tees up his expectations for the new year about Trump-focused disputes the Supreme Court could hear.... Plus: We've got an update on previously anonymous GoFundMe amicus brief backers. And there are some big LGBT cases on the court's Jan. 4 conference. Thanks for reading -- and happy new year!
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Steven Witzel and Amanda Giglio | January 2, 2019
In this Corporate Crime column, Steven Witzel and Amanda Giglio discuss the practice colloquially known as “prison gerrymandering” through which incarcerated people are counted as residents of the towns where they are imprisoned (rather than where they lived before they were incarcerated) for purposes of drawing parameters for legislative districts.
By C. Ryan Barber | December 28, 2018
Letter replaces former Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher appellate partner Thomas Hungar, who was picked for the post in 2016 by House Speaker Paul Ryan.
By C. Ryan Barber | Mike Scarcella | December 28, 2018
A collection of our 2018 public-records reporting on the financial disclosures from Big Law partners who left, among other firms, Paul Weiss; King & Spalding; Williams & Connolly; Kirkland & Ellis, Covington & Burling, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius; and Wilmer.
By Mike Scarcella | December 28, 2018
Geoffrey Berman, the U.S. attorney for SDNY, reported earning about $3.5 million in salary and bonus last year at Greenberg Traurig. Marc Berger, director of the SEC's New York office, earned a partnership share of $2.4 million last year from Ropes & Gray.
By Mike Scarcella | December 27, 2018
U.S. District Judge John Bates in Washington on Thursday was weighing the New York attorney general's opposition to the government's request that deadlines be extended in a suit against the U.S. Labor Department.
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