By Phillip Bantz | February 15, 2019
The New Jersey-based Fortune 200 company's former chief legal officer, Steven Schwartz, and its ex-president, Gordon Coburn, now face criminal charges for allegedly authorizing a building contractor to pay more than $3.6 million in bribes to a government official in India.
By Phillip Bantz | February 15, 2019
The New Jersey-based Fortune 200 company's former chief legal officer, Steven Schwartz, and its ex-president, Gordon Coburn, now face criminal charges for allegedly authorizing a building contractor to pay more than $3.6 million in bribes to a government official in India.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Barry J. Schindler and Laurin T. Buettner | February 15, 2019
How to guard your patents abroad, even though U.S. patent protection is not extraterritorial.
By Phillip Bantz | February 13, 2019
The Treasury Department dismissed the list as being based on flimsy methodology and suggested that U.S. financial institutions ignore it.
By Phillip Bantz | February 13, 2019
“They threw so much shade on the European Commission,” said one international trade lawyer. The Treasury Department not only dismissed the list as being based on flimsy methodology, it also suggested that U.S. financial institutions ignore it.
By MP McQueen | February 11, 2019
“Just because you don't have to submit a mandatory declaration doesn't mean you don't have CFIUS issues,” said Kenneth J. Nunnenkamp, an international trade and national security partner at Morgan Lewis' Washington, D.C., office.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joel Cohen | February 11, 2019
In his Ethics and Criminal Practice column, Joel Cohen writes: Paul Whelan, a U.S. citizen, has been accused of spying by Russia. His Russian lawyer, Vladimir Zherebenkov, is a former Soviet government investigator. Zherebenkov was challenged in the U.S. press for seeming to do the Kremlin's bidding in the guise of representing his client. But what if his actions are in the best interest of his client?
By Dylan Jackson | February 7, 2019
Putting more pressure on the government of Nicolas Maduro, the Trump administration levied heavy sanctions against Venezuela's state-owned oil giant.
By Dylan Jackson | February 7, 2019
Further putting pressure on the government of Nicholas Maduro, the Trump administration levied heavy sanctions on Venezuela national oil giant Petroleos de Venezuela SA.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By David Lenefsky | February 7, 2019
President Trump announced on January 17 that the United States will seek to develop new technologies to enhance its missile defenses in order to detect and intercept an adversary's missiles, including enemy missiles still on the ground in their boost phase prior to launch, or moments after liftoff. The announcement warrants a review of the law of nuclear weapons.
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