By C. Ryan Barber | February 28, 2018
"If we think it's a good case, we'll bring it. If not, we're happy to get out of the way and let you all do it by yourselves," Mick Mulvaney, the acting Consumer Financial Protection Bureau director, told state attorneys general Wednesday in Washington.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | February 28, 2018
Finding that the arrangement did not run afoul of New York usury laws, the Third Circuit has ruled that a litigation funder is entitled to a chunk of the proceeds from a plaintiff's settlement of a legal malpractice lawsuit against Reed Smith.
By Ross Todd | February 28, 2018
Gibson Dunn partners Theodore J. Boutrous Jr., Joshua A. Jessen, Michael Li-Ming Wong and Rachel S. Brass all entered appearances for Yahoo Tuesday.
By Mike Scarcella | February 28, 2018
Three things to know from Skadden partner Michael Scudder's U.S. Senate questionnaire.
By Katheryn Tucker | February 27, 2018
On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey White of the Northern District of California denied SeaWorld's motion for sanctions against Covington & Burling.
By Max Mitchell | February 27, 2018
Sessions outlined plans to create a new litigation-oriented task force within the Department of Justice to pursue claims against opioid manufacturers and distributors.
By Marcia Coyle | February 27, 2018
"I think the starting point all would agree, in what was it, 1986, no one ever heard of clouds," Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said to the DOJ's Michael Dreeben on Tuesday in the data-privacy case United States v. Microsoft.
By Ross Todd | February 27, 2018
The Ninth Circuit on Tuesday upheld a lower court that dismissed a copyright infringement case brought against Nike by a photographer who accused the company of ripping off his photograph of Michael Jordan when creating the "Jumpman" logo.
By Colby Hamilton | February 27, 2018
The recording service TVEyes argued that its recording and archiving of searchable Fox News programming represented a fair use of the cable news company's content. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit disagreed.
By Tony Mauro | February 27, 2018
Reading from his 33-page written dissent, Justice Stephen Breyer signaled alarm with the majority's holding that asylum seekers and other arriving aliens can be detained indefinitely without bond hearings. He called the DOJ's position that the immigrants aren't technically on U.S. soil a “legal fiction.”
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