By Lynne Marek | November 25, 2008
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission expects in the next two to six months to slap larger penalties than in the past on a number of companies that have allegedly violated the a href="http:/
By John Caher | October 23, 2006
The New York Court of Appeals Thursday upheld the constitutionality of a women's health act that pressures some religious-affiliated employers to either offer their employees a prescription pla
By Alyson M. Palmer | August 15, 2006
The Federal Communications Commission was wrong when it said that states cannot regulate the appearance of cell phone bills, the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled. The unanimo
The Associated Press
By Kristen Hays | February 23, 2006
Down the hall from the fraud and conspiracy trial of Enron Corp. founder Kenneth Lay and former Chief Executive Jeffrey Skilling, a federal judge gave initial approval Wednesday for three more bank
By Peter Geier | March 2, 2007
Three years into what was meant to be a quick trip to bankruptcy court, a federal judge in Trenton, N.J., shot down Congoleum Corp.'s "prepackaged" Chapter 11 reorganization plan as a "dead end
By Henry Gottlieb | June 11, 2008
All 83,000 New Jersey lawyers, including in-house counsel and judges, should be required to take 24 credits of course work every two years, a state Supreme Court committee recommends. After
By R. Robin McDonald | May 30, 2007
Race car driver Jeff Burton came in fourth in a May 19 NASCAR event, but his No. 31 Chevrolet still won big that day -- on a different fast track.Lawyers for AT&T, the car's sponsor, bea
By R. Robin McDonald | March 23, 2009
When Atlanta-based Southern Coach Inc. lost its longtime Army vehicle leasing contract with Fort Benning, company owner John Quick wanted to know why. So in November 2007, a member of his s
By Jeffrey A. Barrack | August 27, 2008
Market participants no longer view the three main credit rating agencies -- Fitch Ratings, Moody's Investor Services and Standard & Poor's Rating Services -- as the "de facto watchdog
By Joseph E. Addiego III | March 7, 2006
As an increasing number of disputes are litigated through binding arbitration, its traditional theoretical advantages over the court system -- principally lower cost and speedier resolution -- seem
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