By John Council | November 30, 2017
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has vacated an $84 million class action award won by 173 Texas cities who sued numerous online travel…
By Ben Hancock | November 30, 2017
Reporter Ben Hancock peers around the corner at the courtroom clashes and policy choices that loom over emerging technologies like AI, digital currency and facial recognition.
By Marcia Coyle | November 30, 2017
U.S. securities officials, acting swiftly to conform to the U.S. Justice Department's new position in a pending case in the U.S. Supreme Court, on Thursday moved to foreclose new challenges to the lawfulness of the agency's five administrative law judges. The Justice Department now considers ALJs "officers" rather than mere employees of the agency.
By Erin Mulvaney | November 30, 2017
A former Amazon.com LLC shift manager who claims the online retailer denied him overtime pay is seeking class action status in California federal district court, an attempt to widen the scope of allegations that workers are unfairly enduring grueling “internet speed” conditions in the retail company's warehouses across the country.
By Jenna Greene | November 30, 2017
Working pro bono, a team from Morrison & Foerster last week helped secure a win in a case challenging abortion restrictions in Texas.
By Katheryn Tucker | November 29, 2017
The winning legal team from Fish & Richardson said in a news release Wednesday that it was the first patent jury verdict in U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Georgia since 2001 and the first in the entire state since 2008.
By John Council | November 29, 2017
Texas Supreme Court Justice Don Willett has another skill in addition to Twitter and appellate decision writing — he knows the Heimlich maneuver…
By Ross Todd | November 29, 2017
Plaintiff Chad Eichenberger claimed ESPN violated the Video Privacy Protection Act by handing over his Roku device serial number and the identity of the videos he watched to Adobe Analytics.
By Tony Mauro | November 29, 2017
Several justices seemed troubled by the government's view that cell-site location records, like other business records, should be obtainable in criminal investigations without a warrant.
By Tony Mauro | November 29, 2017
With the addition of five former U.S. Supreme Court clerks from last term's "class,” Jones Day has now hired 36 ex-SCOTUS clerks in the last five years. Think that's over-saturation? Beth Heifetz, who chairs the firm's appellate practice, says they'd be happy to hire more.
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Zeisler & Zeisler, P.C., a highly-regarded corporate restructuring, bankruptcy and commercial litigation boutique, seeks an attorney to ...
General Counsel Posting Number: 1925 Closing Date: Location: Oakland, CA (Hybrid) The Public Health Institute (PHI) is an in...
We are seeking an associate to join our Bankruptcy & Creditors Rights practice in either Hartford or Stamford. Candidates should have a...