By James W. Hutchison | February 16, 2006
How much freedom does a party have to tell its service provider not to use a given employee to provide the services? Although the freedom to contract (or not contract) might suggest that this liber
By Marie-Anne Hogarth | June 13, 2006
It was, as moderator Jeffrey Bleich, a partner at Munger, Tolles & Olson, later put it, "the ultimate nerd fest": a panel of attorneys discussing the future of business cases under a U.S. Supre
By Sue Reisinger | January 24, 2007
The Stolt-Nielsen Transportation Group wants to know why it's been singled out for special treatment by the government. The Norwegian shipping giant has sued the U.S. Department of Justice unde
By Peter Geier | April 26, 2006
Lawyers who represent potentially 10 million Teflon cookware users in federal multidistrict litigation against DuPont are hoping to make stick their claims that they should have been warned of the
By Neal Rubin | October 5, 2005
Typically, large organizations produce, collect and analyze large volumes of data during day-to-day operations. Corporate legal departments are no exception, particularly those involved in dis
By Justin Scheck | July 21, 2006
In announcing criminal and civil complaints against the former CEO and HR manager of Brocade Communications Systems on Thursday, the San Francisco U.S. Attorney and Securities and Exchange Commissi
By Pamela A. MacLean | September 6, 2006
Few things have as much potential to create a litigation war zone next year as the possible fight over control of the pipes feeding all the content over the Internet. "Internet neutralit
By Mike McKee | December 2, 2005
Gary Ross' pot case hasn't gone up in smoke after all.On Wednesday, the California Supreme Court granted review ostensibly to decide whether Ross was wronged when he was fired by Ragin
By Meredith Hobbs | August 2, 2006
Some people would call Cliff Nelson a union buster, but he thinks of himself as a gladiator -- and says he's part of a dying breed.I asked Nelson, a labor lawyer at Constangy Brooks & Sm
By Daniel J. Herling | November 8, 2007
"The China Syndrome" refers to a possible extreme result of a nuclear meltdown. In the 1979 film, the terminology referred to a concept that if an American nuclear reactor melts down, it would melt
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