By Tom McParland | April 29, 2021
The decision, on an issue of first impression, was generally seen as a win for plaintiffs, who may now establish an injury based on an "increased risk" of harm once their sensitive data has leaked.
By Ross Todd | April 29, 2021
According to public opinion polls, Americans' opinions about pharmaceutical companies have grown much more positive over the past year. Will that change how it and other industries are viewed as defendants?
By Ross Todd | April 27, 2021
Not all litigators are trusted boardroom advisors. By all accounts, Sidley Austin's incoming management committee chair is both.
By ALM Staff | April 26, 2021
Each litigation practice has a different pandemic story, but most agree by this point, as one firm leader said, "we're going to be fine."
By Ross Todd | April 26, 2021
"Where I think we're headed with this is not Zoom as a replacement, it's Zoom as an adjacent," said Miami state court Judge Jennifer Bailey during a forum sponsored by the Online Courtroom Project and NITA.
By Cedra Mayfield | April 23, 2021
The Chattahoochee Judicial Circuit is homing in on one of its biggest goals since the coronavirus forced it to shutter in 2020: strategically slicing through its backlogged docket.
By Ross Todd | April 22, 2021
The company has already argued one appeal in the Ninth Circuit claiming that it had no duty to warn Roundup users about cancer risks since federal law governs herbicide labeling. A Georgia doctor whose state law failure to warn claims were tossed on federal preemption grounds is now appealing in the 11th Circuit.
By Ross Todd | April 21, 2021
The engagement letter that Holder sent to Oregon Health & Science University on behalf of Covington & Burling spells out his rate, which will be discounted by 10%, and that the firm won't represent other clients in matters "substantially related" to the internal investigation he's leading for the school. But the firm didn't rule out being adverse to OHSU in the future.
By Cheryl Miller | April 20, 2021
The unusual scene of two sitting lawmakers arguing against the governor—and defying large Democratic majorities in the Legislature—stems from Republicans' irritation with, and political inability to stop, Gov. Gavin Newsom's dozens of pandemic-related orders.
By Scott Graham | April 20, 2021
The judge refused to let VLSI Technology admit evidence of big payouts Intel has made to settle other litigation. The decision came after Intel said it had been careful not to open the door to such evidence this time around.
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