By Ed Silverstein | July 26, 2017
There are privacy and cybersecurity worries about the presence of 'smart, interactive, internet-connected toys,' according to the FBI's statement.
By Rhys Dipshan | July 25, 2017
Designed by solution provider NIC, the new system will seek to automate the cumbersome and manual process of filing claims and tracking case progress.
By Commentary by Richard Montes de Oca and Steven Neuman | July 25, 2017
In June, the Trump administration announced its new Cuba policy, which was presented as a cancellation of the Obama administration's agreement to normalize U.S. relations with "the island." This new policy tightens restrictions on U.S. persons who wish to travel to Cuba and limits the ability of U.S. businesses to engage in commerce with GAESA (Grupo de Administración Empresarial S.A.), the Cuban military's business and commerce division, write Richard Montes de Oca and Steven Neuman.
By Jenna Greene | July 25, 2017
There's a tendency by those outside the legal profession to conflate lawyers with their clients, to assume that if you represented someone, you must personally be aligned with their interests or find them sympathetic. The latest target: Kirkland and Ellis white-collar defense partner Brian Benczkowski.
By Cogan Schneier | July 25, 2017
Partner Brian Benczkowski, the nominee for the DOJ's Criminal Division, said he wouldn't have taken Alfa-Bank as a client looking back.
By R. Robin McDonald | July 25, 2017
Byung J. "BJay" Pak sees America not as a melting pot of cultures but rather as a tapestry woven with threads of justice and liberty.
By R. Robin McDonald | July 25, 2017
Federal lawyers prosecuting accused government leaker Reality Winner are doubling down in a dispute with Winner's defense team over what should be treated as classified information.
By Jenna Greene | July 25, 2017
Maybe Sessions will be Janet Reno to Trump's Bill Clinton: the AG who the president wishes would quit—but won't.
By Tony Mauro | July 24, 2017
President Donald Trump's personal lawyer Jay Sekulow said on Sunday that the U.S. Supreme Court may ultimately be called on to decide the scope of presidential pardon power. If that happens, the justices will likely dust off one of the few cases in which the high court has ruled on the pardon power: the 1866 decision in Ex Parte Garland, involving one of the most prolific—and acerbic—advocates before the court: Augustus Garland.
By Commentary by Yosbel A. Ibarra and Osvaldo Miranda | July 24, 2017
Nothing impedes business like uncertainty; therefore it's not surprising that many U.S. business owners still have more questions than answers about how they can do business in Cuba. The questions first arose in a substantive way on Dec. 17, 2014, when the Obama administration and the Cuban government announced they were taking steps to reestablish diplomatic and greater commercial relations between the two countries, write Yosbel A. Ibarra and Osvaldo Miranda.
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