By Sid Steinberg | April 17, 2006
Correctly accommodating employees with limitations under the Americans with Disabilities Act has never been simple. The ADA requires an extensive "interactive process" in determining if, and how, a
By Hank Grezlak | March 7, 2006
Employers can't be hit with penalties for choosing to hold off paying a workers' compensation award while applying for supersedeas, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has ruled. The justic
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By Linda L. Listrom | February 14, 2008
This term the U.S. Supreme Court will decide an important case that could extend the False Claims Act to al
By Henry Gottlieb | October 10, 2006
A case in Atlantic City, N.J., shows what kind of malpractice disputes can arise when lawyers serve as officers in small companies in turmoil. The principal owner of a condominium apartment
By Amanda Bronstad | March 27, 2006
The lawyers involved in the first West Coast trial against the maker of Vioxx are butting heads over whether jurors should decide one or more of the cases at the same time.More than 1,800 la
By Mary Pat Gallagher | February 13, 2007
A New Jersey judge has found no spoliation of e-mail evidence in a business dispute, despite the destruction or disappearance of two laptops, a computer server hard drive and back-up tapes. /p
By Zusha Elinson | November 25, 2008
When Novafora Inc. announced last week that it was buying Santa Clara, Calif.'s Transmeta Corp. for $255.6 million in cash, it seemed like a straightforward deal. But it turns out
By John Caher | September 5, 2006
Counsel fees under the Workers' Compensation Law cannot be apportioned when the future benefits to the claimant are speculative, as they are when a permanent, partial disability is reported, the Ap
By Pamela A. MacLean | November 28, 2006
Spending $1 million of his employer's money on legal fees to fight a $70,000 insider-trading penalty may have been easy for Robert D. Happ, but having to pay the million back to his former comp
By Sandhya Bathija | July 30, 2007
For attorney Larry Rosen, one pleasant conversation led to years' worth of legal work -- from Donald Trump. In 1994, Rosen was just starting out as the only tenant in one of New York City's
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Winkler Kurtz, LLP, a Port Jefferson Station law firm, seeks a Matrimonial Associate Attorney to provide assistance and be involved in all a...
NORTHERN NEW JERSEY LAW FIRM WITH PRACTICE LIMITED TO REPRESENTATION OF ACCIDENT VICTIMS AND INJURED WORKERS SEEKS A WORKERS COMPENSATION A...
We are seeking two attorneys with a minimum of two to three years of experience to join our prominent and thriving education law practice in...