By Jenna Greene | March 5, 2018
Lawyers from plaintiffs powerhouse Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd called out “a cadre of firms responsible for a dramatic explosion of federal deal litigation,” and urged a federal judge in San Francisco to reject a fee request by fellow plaintiffs' counsel.
By Jenna Greene | February 28, 2018
There's litigating in the court of public opinion—and then wow. There's this case.
By Jenna Greene | February 15, 2018
Quick show of hands: how many of you have ever paid $130,000 in hush money out of your own pocket to help a client? And didn't actually mention it to them? Or ask to get paid back?
By Jenna Greene | February 14, 2018
George Mazza, 62, is a longtime senior counsel in the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division. But what he wants now is to get a Ph.D in theology from Georgetown. When the university rejected him, he sued.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Craig A. Newman and Jonathan Hatch | February 13, 2018
A Supreme Court ruling in a recent case would help clarify the standing issue for the lower courts, consumers and companies that suffer data breaches.
By Jenna Greene | February 13, 2018
A California family sued Starbucks for selling “dangerous, defective, contaminated, tainted, spoiled and unsafe beverages.” But their lawyer might want to think twice before taking this one to a jury.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Vivia Chen | February 8, 2018
While women in the U.S. and many parts of the world are spilling their guts about harassment and assault, and airing the names of their alleged perpetrators along the way, the Brits are keeping their lips tightly sealed.
By Jenna Greene | February 7, 2018
By refusing reciprocity or admission on motion, California sends a message: Your out-of-state bar exams just aren't as good as ours. Because California is special. (Oh, and did I mention it's currently 76 and sunny here?)
By Jenna Greene | February 6, 2018
So much for the Judicial Council's probe into sexual misconduct by retired Judge Alex Kozinski, plus Pennsylvania Republicans refuse to give up gerrymandering fight.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By David R. Cohen and Todd R. Fairman | February 5, 2018
Most lawyers know to advise their clients to preserve evidence in their “care, custody or control” relevant to pending or threatened litigation. But exactly how far does “control” go? Can a party be sanctioned for spoliation for failing to issue a legal hold notice to a third party who has no obligation to follow your legal hold instructions?
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