By Timothy P. Harkness and Darren LaVerne | July 27, 2006
Even the most na�ve of witnesses typically understands that lying to a prosecutor, FBI agent or regulator is a crime. What even sophisticated witnesses don't tend to know, however, is that lyin
The Associated Press
By Judith Kohler | December 21, 2005
In a triumph for federal prosecutors, former Qwest Communications CEO Joseph Nacchio was indicted Tuesday on 42 counts of insider trading accusing him of illegally selling off $101 million in stock
By Xenia P. Kobylarz | July 12, 2006
After losing two trademark cases, an attorney for a software company is trying to get the rulings thrown out because one of the 9th Circuit judges hearing the case apparently had a financial confli
By Shannon P. Duffy | January 30, 2007
A price-fixing conspiracy is illegal -- even if prices actually dropped during the alleged conspiracy -- if the plaintiffs can show that the goal of the conspirators was not to raise prices, bu
By Jospeh McLaughlin | February 9, 2007
For the better part of a decade, it has been commonplace to say that Congress's goal in enacting the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act establishing a uniform and more exacting stan
The Corporate Counselor
By Elena Park | January 30, 2008
Today, a great number of U.S. companies will hire foreign national workers, scrupulously check work authorization and maintain heightened awareness about the potential for race/nationality claims.
The Associated Press
By Marcy Gordon | February 8, 2006
A law that reshaped the accounting industry after a wave of corporate scandals is being challenged on constitutional grounds by pro-business conservatives. Their big-guns legal team includes
By Rebecca Riddick | August 10, 2006
The $50 million settlement of a class action suit by Florida motorists against West Palm Beach-based Fidelity Federal Bank & Trust could be the first of several big payouts by companies accused
By Paul Braverman | January 20, 2006
"I'll take a case of the '61 Latour as well. And put a couple of bottles on the plane. We'll drink them on the way to Ibiza," said Lloyd Constantine. He hung up and turned to study some samples
By Sue Reisinger | July 16, 2007
Baker Hughes Inc.'s bribery nightmare first became public in 2002, when a former employee filed a civil suit against the company in Texas. The worker claimed that he'd been fired from the global oi
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