By Victoria Pfefferle-Gillot | February 10, 2022
Kenneth G. Menendez of Freeman, Mathis & Gary has entered an appearance for Spectra Metal Sales Inc. in a pending lawsuit over alleged employment discrimination under the ADA.
By Kenneth Artz | February 10, 2022
"Clients, patients, and companies alike expect their personal information to be protected and professionals have a duty to maintain that standard."--Danielle Butler, Director of Marketing for The Records Company.
By Jessica Mach | February 10, 2022
Patricia Charlemagne says she earned less than four colleagues with the same title and was fired after pressing her employer, Educational Alliance, to address disparities.
By Michael A. Mora | February 10, 2022
A defamation law expert said Florida has a low bar to prove defamation.
By Raychel Lean | February 10, 2022
"We thought they were beautiful photos. If I'd known they were copyrighted, I would have never put them on there," the attorney said.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | February 10, 2022
Since the job-seeker was never convicted of a felony or misdemeanor and his defiant trespassing conviction was unrelated to the work he would do as a driver, Uber had no legal right to use that conviction as a basis to deny him employment, the complaint said.
By Paul M. Kaplan | February 10, 2022
This article will address the parallels with the initial Microsoft litigation in the U.S. District Court, 'U.S. v. Microsoft', regarding §2 monopolization claim under the Sherman Act and what Google can expect during the litigation.
By Andrea L. D'Ambra and Susana Medeiros | February 10, 2022
While line-by-line designations may make a lot of sense for smaller cases, for larger matters where only a small fraction of the documents reviewed and produced are ever used in motions or trial, parties should focus the expense of line-by-line designations on the documents that really matter.
By John Vukelj, Sarah Krissoff and Gregory Bruno | February 10, 2022
This article summarizes the most significant changes in the SEC's proposal and highlights what they may mean for corporate insiders defending against securities fraud claims in the future.
By David L. Berkey | February 10, 2022
When a board acts contrary to restraints set forth in the cooperative's proprietary lease, it risks suit by the aggrieved seller to force the board to approve the sale to the proposed purchaser and, in addition, to recover the seller's attorney fees and damages for the seller's costs incurred to carry the apartment until the court-ordered transfer occurs. This is what happened in 'Kotler v. 979 Corp.'
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McDermott Law, LLC, a boutique Plaintiffs-focused firm located in the Denver Tech Center, has an opening for a full-time associate attorney....
Beitchman & Zekian, P.C. seeks a motivated and ambitious attorney with 2 to 4 years of civil and business litigation experience for its ...
Job Summary: The Director of Operations will be responsible for the strategic and operational management of the firm's Personal Injury pract...