National Law Journal | Analysis
By Jimmy Hoover | September 4, 2024
The dog days may be slow for the justices but not for the clerk's office at the nation's top court.
By Avalon Zoppo | September 4, 2024
"Ericsson's Anti-Corruption Statements contained no such specificity that would transform any of those generalized statements from mere puffery to an actionable material misrepresentation," the appeals court wrote.
By Abigail Adcox | September 4, 2024
Moody's Investors Service, which agreed to pay a $20 million civil penalty, turned to S&C partner Stephen Ehrenberg.
By Cheryl Miller | September 4, 2024
The events this week featuring former acting U.S. Attorney General Sally Yates are expected to raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for the presidential candidate who honed her legal and political chops in California.
By Maria Dinzeo | September 4, 2024
"What resonates longer is the way that people will feel about Disney, not the recollection of why they feel that way," said Aaron Davis, a partner at Davis Goldman.
By Abigail Adcox | September 4, 2024
Mark Seidman served as the lead government enforcer for transactions in the grocery, retail, consumer products and health care services industries.
By Abigail Adcox | September 4, 2024
"I did reach a point where a lot of my cases were sort of wrapping up," Sonali Patel said, "and it felt like a good time to see if there was the right opportunity in the private sector."
By Maydeen Merino | September 3, 2024
"Based on her enthusiasm about labor, she will continue the Biden administration's efforts to use antitrust to protect against anti-poaching agreements that suppress wages or noncompetes, or the use of merger law to go after mergers that harm labor," said University of Pennsylvania law professor Herbert Hovenkamp.
By Jimmy Hoover | September 3, 2024
"[T]he United States cannot impose on Oklahoma an obligation to provide abortion referrals when Title X itself does not address referrals at all," the state wrote in its unsuccessful request.
By Sulaiman Abdur-Rahman | September 3, 2024
U.S. District Judge Reggie B. Walton ruled Syria is liable for $364 million in damages to the families of the late Staff Sgt. Alex R. Jiménez and Spc. Byron W. Fouty in a Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act wrongful-death case filed by the Perles Law Firm and Meridian 361 International Law Group.
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