New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Angela Turturro | January 10, 2022
In this Special Report: "Three Ways To Prevent Litigation Malpractice," "In-House Litigators: You Have More Options Than You May Think," "New York's Expanded Anti-SLAPP Statute: Factors To Consider When Selecting a Forum" and "Second Circuit's 'Melendez' Decision and the Reasonableness of Emergency-Related Laws."
By Dara Kam | January 10, 2022
University leaders are seeking to "silence the viewpoints that some professors would express because they fear that the opinions anger the state's political leaders," the professors' attorney has argued.
By Ross Todd | January 10, 2022
The firm has scored more than $2 billion in recoveries in trials for clients for Huntsman, Motorola and TriZetto alone in the two-plus years since it announced a concerted effort to expand its plaintiff-side docket.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Ross Todd | January 10, 2022
Back in 2019, a Delaware jury awarded Kirkland client Parthenon Capital Partners $82.1 million in a fraud case against Express Scripts Inc. and United BioSource Corp. tied to their 2013 sale of a business to Parthenon.
By Alaina Lancaster | Zack Needles | January 7, 2022
In this week's episode, Skadden's Alli Brown shares her strategy for securing defense verdicts in venues considered to be plaintiff-friendly.
By Jason Grant | January 7, 2022
The consent decree, entered into in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma, also terminates the Lowes' interests in 97 endangered or threatened animals seized from their park, and it affirms they have abandoned their legal rights to another 41 animals they'd kept, according to the DOJ.
By Scott Graham | January 7, 2022
SAS Institute v. World Programming Limited features the same issues, some of the same litigators and many of the same amici curiae as the famous Supreme Court showdown.
By Cedra Mayfield | January 7, 2022
Judge Timothy Walmsley sentenced defendants Travis and Greg McMichael to life without the possibility of parole plus 20 years, and William "Roddie" Bryan to life with the possibility of parole.
By Zack Needles | January 7, 2022
Judges and court administrators across the country are, at this point, pretty well used to the pandemic mucking up plans to resume in-person operations. But that doesn't mean they've settled on a uniform response to new COVID-related complications.
By Tom McParland | January 7, 2022
U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon rejected arguments from a consortium of states that an interlocutory appeal to the Second Circuit would delay resolution of Purdue's Chapter 11 case.
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