The Associated Press
By Michael Liedtke | September 27, 2005
A California judge ruled Friday that Visa USA Inc. and MasterCard International Inc. don't have to send individual warnings to thousands of consumers whose personal account information was stolen d
By Zusha Elinson | January 5, 2009
Big tech companies haven't stopped patenting their inventions, but more than ever they're also buying others' patents as a weapon in IP litigation. In-house counsel know that the best defens
By Thomas E.L. Dewey and Kara Siegel | June 3, 2008
Arbitration of commercial disputes has become increasingly common, due in part to the widely held perception that arbitration is a less expensive and more expeditious method of dispute resolu
The Associated Press
By Matthew Barakat | February 9, 2007
For the second time, a judge has dismissed a lawsuit against a military contractor that whistleblowers accuse of scamming the U.S. government out of tens of millions of dollars in the first months
By Mike McKee | December 18, 2006
Litigants wanting to use information hammered out during confidential mediations must make that perfectly clear in writing, the California Supreme Court a href="http://www.law.com/jsp/ca/LawDecisi
By Steven H. Pollak | October 19, 2005
When an employee-benefits arrangement at a pair of Norcross, Ga., companies allowed younger workers to receive a more generous severance package than their older counterparts, the result was a
By Beth Bar | March 5, 2007
A federal judge has rejected a request that she recuse herself from a high-profile litigation involving the music industry on the ground that her attorney husband and his firm have represented
A Practical Guide To Equal Employment Opportunity
By Beth Bar | August 8, 2006
An administrative law judge at the Securities and Exchange Commission has dismissed civil accusations of "market timing" against a former Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce executive. Robert
By Pamela A. MacLean | December 29, 2008
Douglas Whitney, a partner at McDermott Will & Emery, has represented national accounting companies and law firms accused of promotion of illegal tax shelters in Internal Revenue Service in
By Beth Bar | September 1, 2006
A pension administrator has broad discretion in deciding whether to accept or reject conflicting proof of age, a New York federal court has found. In
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