By Ross Todd | May 14, 2021
"When all is said and done, I think this will be the case that my kids and grandkids will look back at as being the crowning achievement of my career," says Kirkland's Mike Jones.
By Ross Todd | May 10, 2021
"We can easily mobilize a team to 'parachute into' any local jurisdiction in the U.S. and prepare for trial under significant time constraints, combining local talent with national expertise," Cohen says.
By Ross Todd | May 7, 2021
Glenn Kurtz, the global head of commercial litigation at White & Case, and partner Claudine Columbres got a two paragraph ruling from the Delaware Supreme Court this week that brought an end to four years of high stakes litigation between the two health insurance giants.
By Ross Todd | May 5, 2021
"I really had this vision that I wanted to use the practice of law to make a difference in a way that was important to me and to find ways to help regular people," says Walsh. "With the global pandemic and being about to turn 50, I realized that if I'm ever going to make a course correction, now was the time."
By Jasmine Floyd | May 4, 2021
"One of the most beneficial trends we have seen post pandemic is the flight of private equity firms from the Northeast and West Coast relocating or establishing substantial outposts in South Florida," said Greenberg Traurig's Michael N. Kreitzer.
By Angela Morris | May 3, 2021
How long to clear the case backlog? Judge Inna Klein said, "My guess is between two and four years, and that's just looking at statistics and how many new cases came in this year and projecting that the next years will be about the same."
By Ross Todd | May 3, 2021
Mike Stenglein, the leader of the global construction and engineering disputes practice at King & Spalding, says the number of $10-plus billion projects in the world is proliferating, as are disputes over them.
By Ross Todd | April 30, 2021
In a patent showdown between rivals in the network security space, jurors sided with Kirkland's Adam Alper and Mike De Vries by finding that their client APCON didn't infringe and that all asserted claims were invalid.
By Ross Todd | April 23, 2021
Wilmer's William "Bill" Lee, Mary "Mindy" Sooter, and Joseph Mueller convinced a Waco, Texas jury that Intel didn't infringe two microprocessor patents. The win comes a month-and-a-half after Intel was hit with a $2.175 billion damages verdict in the same courtroom.
By Tony Mauro | April 19, 2021
Michael Luttig chats with the National Law Journal about redesigning a first amendment icon. He and his wife, Elizabeth, are underwriting the redesign and installation of the First Amendment tablet that previously adorned the Newseum in Washington, D.C.
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