By Matthew Hirsch | October 30, 2007
A chemical used to help treat diseased kidneys has plaintiffs lawyers salivating at the thought of a new arena of billion-dollar mass torts, but one San Francisco firm wants to take it one suit at
By Tresa Baldas | February 23, 2009
A new provision tucked inside Congress' recently passed stimulus package will prevent some American companies from hiring top-flight global talent, which has immigration lawyers crying foul.
By Beth Bar | December 7, 2006
Can an employee who speaks with attorneys retained by her company on matters involving both her and her employer claim an attorney-client privilege? That was the "troublesome" question South
By Greg Land | October 9, 2006
A Clayton County, Ga., jury has ruled that a Riverdale grandmother was not liable for the deaths of five passengers killed when the woman lost control of her minivan and it rolled into a Texas rive
The Associated Press
By Mike Schneider | June 18, 2007
Two congressional leaders asked the Department of Justice on Thursday to investigate whether NASA's general counsel broke the law when he destroyed recordings of a talk between the space agency's b
By Noel M. Hensley and R. Thaddeus Behrens | September 13, 2005
Today almost every director, officer and general counsel of a public U.S. company has either considered or actually undertaken some form of internal investigation. At the same time, government
By Jonathan Fox | March 10, 2008
When a private equity firm sought to buy a roughly $750 million stake in up-and-coming wireless communications company MetroPCS Communications Inc., 30 to 40 legal issues could have bogged the deal
By Zusha Elinson | May 28, 2008
The stock option backdating era is drawing to a close in the San Francisco Bay Area. Marc Fagel, co-acting regional director of the SEC's San Francisco office, said Thursday it's
By Steven H. Pollak | November 2, 2005
A Fulton County State Court judge has added a $60 million bill to the woes faced by two former Safety-Kleen executives for their parts in the waste management company's accounting scandal five
The Associated Press
November 29, 2006
DaimlerChrysler Corp. must pay $20 million to a retired police officer and brake repairman whose right lung was removed because of cancer caused by asbestos, a jury ruled. A jury in Manhatta
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