By Rebecca Cohen | September 15, 2017
Crystal Nix-Hines, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, has returned to Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan as a partner in Los Angeles. The former reporter for The New York Times has also moonlighted as a television show script writer.
By R. Robin McDonald | September 15, 2017
Two-thirds of the nation's state attorneys general are raising "profound concerns" with Atlanta-based Equifax's outside counsel not only about the credit bureau's massive data breach but also about how the company has been treating consumers trying to safeguard their personal and financial information.
By Josefa Velasquez | September 15, 2017
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo issued an executive order Friday banning state agencies and New York state police from inquiring about individuals' immigration status.
By Katelyn Polantz | September 15, 2017
It's been another busy week in the nation's capital for lawyers and news-watchers alike.
By Karen Sloan | September 15, 2017
Albany Law School is kicking off a fundraising initiative, and it has tapped a new administrator to oversee that effort.
By Kristen Rasmussen | September 15, 2017
A federal judge in Texas sentenced a woman with advanced metastatic cancer to 75 years in prison for Medicare fraud last month amid a crackdown on health care fraud by the government. Here's what we learned about the case.
By njlawjournal | New Jersey Law Journal | September 15, 2017
Election Commission Only Needed Common Law Quorum, Without Regard to Political Affiliations, to Approve Complaint
By Cogan Schneier | September 15, 2017
Career DOJ lawyer Joseph 'Jody' Hunt was nominated today.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | September 14, 2017
Texas plaintiffs firms have begun filing lawsuits on behalf of clients who live in Houston neighborhoods that flooded when the Army Corps of Engineers authorized controlled water releases from two reservoirs in the wake of Hurricane Harvey. The suits allege that the intentional flooding was an unlawful government taking of property, violating the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
By Samantha Joseph | September 14, 2017
Miami-based Akerman reportedly participated in a lobbying dinner that caught federal investigators' attention, and fueled speculation of alleged unethical behavior by President Donald Trump's nominee for a top job at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA.
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