By C. Ryan Barber | March 19, 2018
“On its face, there doesn't seem to be any reason why the president can't be held liable for violating the law,” Joseph diGenova wrote in a 1997 op-ed for The Wall Street Journal.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | March 19, 2018
The U.S. Supreme Court and a federal appeals panel each rejected separate challenges brought by leading Pennsylvania Republicans aimed at invalidating the state's recently redrawn congressional map.
By Cogan Schneier | March 19, 2018
Lawyers for AT&T have filed hundreds of objections to the government's proposed evidence in its case against the telecom giant's merger with Time Warner.
By Josefa Velasquez | March 19, 2018
On Wednesday, the state's Court of Appeals will hear oral arguments in the case 'People v. Credit Suisse Securities', which stems from a 2012 lawsuit Schneiderman filed charging that the Swiss international bank misrepresented the risks of residential mortgage-backed securities to investors in 2006 and 2007. Those securities helped spur the 2008 financial crisis.
By Roy Strom | March 19, 2018
David Wales, the former head of Jones Day's 150-lawyer antitrust and competition practice, officially started Monday as a partner at Skadden in Washington, D.C.
By C. Ryan Barber | March 19, 2018
"These awards demonstrate that whistleblowers can provide the SEC with incredibly significant information that enables us to pursue and remedy serious violations that might otherwise go unnoticed," Jane Norberg, chief of the SEC's whistleblower office, said in a statement Monday.
National Law Journal | Profile|News
By Samantha Joseph | March 17, 2018
Michael Bromwich is a Harvard-educated litigator who's served federal, state and local governments.
By Ross Todd | March 16, 2018
A federal judge agreed that false advertising claims against the telecom giant cannot be routed to arbitration under a recent California Supreme Court decision.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 16, 2018
The appellate court on Thursday found that a defendant's due process rights weren't violated when a district attorney in California hired three outside law firms on a contingency basis to pursue a civil lawsuit.
By Andrew Denney | March 16, 2018
A copyright infringement suit concerning the use of an artist's work in an advertising campaign referencing the erotic drama “Fifty Shades of Grey” is bound by statute to remain in a Manhattan federal court, a judge ruled.
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