By Tasha Norman | May 15, 2020
"I fully expected and looked forward to being in a position of being able to help others more as a partner, but I hadn't realized how much help I would need."
By Zach Warren | Rhys Dipshan | May 13, 2020
Lupl is expected to be open access, meaning that any legal department and law firm will be able to use the technology as they wish. Company founders say they're stressing data integration in the product's release.
By Dylan Jackson | May 12, 2020
The annual meeting will now take place online, the organization said in an email to members.
By David Thomas | May 4, 2020
State Department alum Patrick Pearsall co-chaired Jenner & Block's international arbitration group and led its public international law practice. He joins Allen & Overy just weeks after a pair of Justice Department veterans joined the Magic Circle firm in D.C. from Orrick.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By John B. Bellinger III | April 22, 2020
In permitting Title III lawsuits for the first time, the Trump administration aimed to pressure foreign investors out of Cuba. But most of the defendants thus far have been U.S. companies whose activities only touch Cuba in a minor way.
By Vincent Chow | April 20, 2020
The basketball legend scored another win against a Chinese sportswear company in China but his legal battle against the company isn't over.
By Michael W. Mitchell and Edward Roche | April 20, 2020
A South Carolina resident sued Marriott in a federal court in his home state after suffering an injury in a Marriott-affiliated hotel overseas. The Fourth Circuit's decision provides helpful guidance on the scope of personal jurisdiction over corporations, and offers some food for thought for litigants.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Alberto Yohananoff and Richard Min | April 14, 2020
This article discusses how the use of forensic evaluators in Hague Convention cases differs from the use of forensic evaluators in custody cases where the evaluator is the court appointed neutral expert. It then focuses on the nuances related to one of the exceptions (or affirmative defense) in Hague cases.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Richard Min and Alberto Yohananoff | April 13, 2020
The role of forensic mental health experts in assessing the risks of harm associated with returning children to an environment of domestic abuse has become integral in Hague Convention cases.
Litigation Daily | Letter to the Editor
By John J. Sullivan and Jesse Ryan Loffler | April 6, 2020
"While this sounds like a movie, it is not. It is real, and it is tragic. It involves the callous theft of much needed funds from the people of Bangladesh, for which the Bank serves as the Central Bank," write John J. Sullivan and Jesse Ryan Loffler.
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