By Max Mitchell | November 1, 2018
A man claiming to have been cheated out of credit for writing a song that was eventually recorded by R&B star Usher has won a more than $40 million judgment in a combined verdict and settlement against two men he co-wrote the song with.
By Brian Baxter | November 1, 2018
Tasha Schwikert-Warren, a former Olympic gymnast now working as an associate at Holland & Hart, is suing the organization in L.A. Superior Court alongside her sister.
By Brian Baxter | October 31, 2018
Tasha Schwikert-Warren, a former Olympic gymnast now working as an associate at Holland & Hart in Las Vegas, is suing the organization along with her sister.
By Karen Sloan | October 31, 2018
If Northwestern Law grad Jerry Springer can be a TV judge, why not Al Roker or Susan Lucci? Here are the daytime television stars we'd like to see dispensing justice from the bench.
By Ross Todd | October 29, 2018
An arbitrator found that the Bay Area's NBA team, which is set to decamp from Oakland to new digs in San Francisco next season, must continue to pay debts incurred in the mid-90s to renovate its current home, Oracle Arena.
By Terry Spencer | October 29, 2018
On Nov. 6, Florida voters will decide on a measure banning greyhound racing by 2021 that may kill it nationally.
By Michael I. Rudell and Neil J. Rosini | October 24, 2018
Entertainment Law columnists Michael I. Rudell and Neil J. Rosini write: Much press is given to the compensation aspects of the creators' agreements with exhibitors, but attention also should be paid to the extent and duration of the exhibitor's exclusivity in the property in which rights are being acquired, including holdback provisions, reversion of rights, and the right to produce derivative spinoffs, sequels and other derivative works.
By Dara Kam | October 23, 2018
Amendment 3, placed on the ballot by a political committee largely backed by Disney Worldwide Services Inc. and the Seminole Tribe of Florida, would give voters the “exclusive right to decide whether to authorize casino gambling” in the state.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Louis Locascio | October 19, 2018
A decision authored by New Jersey's own Justice Alito is significant not only for its practical result, but also for its astute discussion of the basis for the decision, i.e., the anti-commandeering principle.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | October 18, 2018
A man claiming to have been cheated out of credit for writing a song that was eventually recorded by R&B star Usher has won a more than $40 million judgment in a combined verdict and settlement against two men he co-wrote the song with.
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