By Mason Lawlor | August 23, 2024
"We could not be more pleased for the client to be part of this amazing trial team," Maynard Nexsen shareholder Susan McWilliams said in a statement. "Securing this win was a gratifying end to a long and arduous litigation."
By Avalon Zoppo | August 21, 2024
Appeals court considers whether the state's prohibition violates the Constitution's Equal Protection Clause.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Marc A. Lieberstein, David T. Azrin and Thomas M. Pitegoff | August 21, 2024
"New York businesses, and those who would like to do business in New York, should not have to conduct themselves under the cloud and uncertainty of New York's NYFSA," write Marc A. Lieberstein, David T. Azrin and Thomas M. Pitegoff.
By Cheryl Miller | August 20, 2024
A deal between General Motors and the plaintiffs bar lobby would make it tougher for defective-car owners and their lawyers to sue automakers for civil penalties.
By Todd E. Soloway, Bryan T. Mohler and Itai Y. Raz | August 20, 2024
Authors Todd Soloway, Bryan Mohler and Itai Raz offer an overview of the draft "Safe Hotels Act," and consider potential legal challenges to the bill if it is passed into law.
By Avalon Zoppo | August 20, 2024
The request follows a federal judge having thrown out an anti-pregnancy-discrimination law, saying the House of Representatives lacked a constitutional quorum of members present.
By Cheryl Miller | August 16, 2024
Under terms of the negotiated agreement, automakers and their allies will drop a threatened initiative to cap attorneys' contingency fees.
By Cheryl Miller | August 15, 2024
Bills regulating AI training and safety will move to legislative floor votes after committee amendments.
By Brian Lee | August 15, 2024
The pivotal ruling by Appellate Division, Third Department Justice Sharon A.M. Aarons denied the office of New York Attorney General Letitia James' motion to dismiss A.J. v. State of New York, reversing a Court of Claims ruling.
By Mayling Blanco, Katey Fardelmann, Sarah Perlin and Andrey Spektor | August 15, 2024
In fraud and corruption cases, the Supreme Court and the US government are marching in opposite directions. The DOJ continues to embrace new tools from Congress and the White House—including a newly-passed anti-corruption law—while the Supreme Court has increasingly cut back on the DOJ's broad theories of prosecution. This article examines the implications from the Court's latest opinion, Snyder v. United States, which, if applied to other bribery statutes, could severely limit the DOJ's view that gifts to government officials are no different than bribes.
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