By Katelyn Polantz | September 27, 2017
Wilmer, Cutler, Pickering, Hale and Dorr apologized Wednesday after one of its lawyers accidentally sent a Wall Street Journal reporter privileged documents detailing a history of whistleblower claims at PepsiCo.
By Greg Land | Daily Report | September 27, 2017
A half-dozen professors from three Georgia universities have sued Gov. Nathan Deal and Attorney General Chris Carr over claims Georgia's campus carry bill violates the state's constitution.
By Jenna Greene | September 26, 2017
Count irony as one of the (many) casualties of the Trump administration. How else to explain the oh-so-earnest speech Attorney General Jeff Sessions gave Tuesday at Georgetown Law School on “The Importance of Free Speech”?
By Greg Land | September 26, 2017
The professors claim the legislation signed into law earlier this year violates a mandate that the state Board of Regents has sole authority over management of Georgia's state universities and colleges.
By Josefa Velasquez | September 26, 2017
The New York Dept. of Financial Services announced that it has approved a new banking development district in Oneida County to expand banking in the low income community.
By Christine Simmons | September 26, 2017
Evan Norris, who led the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York's prosecution team in the sprawling FIFA soccer corruption case, joined Cravath, Swaine & Moore this month as counsel.
By R. Robin McDonald | September 26, 2017
The City of Atlanta's former chief procurement officer—who for more than a decade oversaw billions of dollars in city purchases and public project expenditures—has been charged with engaging in a bribery conspiracy in a burgeoning federal corruption investigation of Atlanta City Hall.
By Colby Hamilton | September 26, 2017
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, again finding that jury instructions in public corruption trials after the U.S. Supreme Court's McDonnell…
By Greg Land | September 26, 2017
The court ruled that, even if the Huntsville City Schools superintendent declined to promote the teacher because of her father's comments, her First Amendment and intimate association rights claims cannot overcome the superintendent's immunity.
By EDITORIAL BOARD | September 26, 2017
Although our governments no longer demand segregation, housing assistance continues to confine low-income people of color to the low opportunity areas of Connecticut.
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