By Xiumei Dong | April 30, 2018
A pair of former Big Law partners and in-house refugees in the Bay Area, W. Fred Norton and Gabrielle "Bree" Hann, have set up their own firm in a former warehouse in Oakland.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By David K. Bissinger | April 30, 2018
Lawyers will enjoy more success in their practice by acknowledging, rather than ignoring, the natural biases of the participants and developing a practical understanding of bias in their practices.
By John Schneider | April 30, 2018
A multi-billion dollar verdict involving breaches of fiduciary duty scores the top award in the 2017 list by NLJ-affiliate VerdictSearch.
By The Legal Intelligencer | April 30, 2018
This year we focused exclusively on firms with fewer than 200 lawyers firmwide for our top litigation departments. A group of editors on The Legal's staff discussed and debated the submissions before ultimately selecting the winners.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Patricia E. Farrell | April 30, 2018
Forming audit committees is becoming a more common practice in the nonprofit sector, offering an unbiased outlet to monitor the financial health of an organization.
By John Council | April 30, 2018
The Texas Supreme Court has reaffirmed one of the strongest immunity protections that civil litigators have by ruling that lawyers cannot be sued by third parties over statements they make in open court on behalf of clients.
By Q. Todd Dickinson and Fabio Marino | April 30, 2018
In the most anticipated patent case of the year, the Supreme Court recently upheld the CAFC in Oil States Energy Services v. Greenes's Energy Group, supporting Congress' power to institute inter partes reviews (IPRs) in the American Invents Act's (AIA) post-grant review process.
By The Legal Intelligencer | April 30, 2018
The Legal is proud to announce the winners in four new categories of awards introduced this year—Law Firm Innovators, Best Law Firm Mentors, Power Players and Unsung Heroes— which were geared exclusively toward firms with fewer than 200 lawyers.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Vasilios J. Kalogredis | April 30, 2018
On Feb. 16, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a complaint intervening in a qui tam action that two former employees brought against their former employer, Patient Care America (PCA), a compounding pharmacy located in Pompano Beach, Florida, complaint filed by the U.S. Department of Justice, United States Medrano v. Diabetic Care Rx, No. 15-cv-62617 (S.D.FL.). In its complaint, the DOJ alleges unjust enrichment, payment by mistake, and violations of the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. Sections 3729-33.
By Colby Hamilton | April 30, 2018
Silver's counsel, Allen & Overy partner Michael Feldberg, previewed the defense strategy of attacking the definitive link between an official act and a thing of value to prove a bribery charge after McDonnell v. United States.
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