By Maria Dinzeo | July 2, 2024
Bret DiMarco, who departed laser maker Coherent two years ago after helping engineer its $7 billion sale, is taking the legal reins of a health tech giant with a stock market value of $37 billion.
By Kate Brumback | The Associated Press | July 2, 2024
The City Council on Monday voted 13-1 to approve the payment to settle a federal lawsuit filed in June 2021 argued that police had no justification for pulling two students from their car and shocking them.
By Samson Amore | July 2, 2024
"Realistically, we have a bunch of clients who want to deploy capital, and they've not been able to," said new hire Warren Biro. "Now, they want to get their money out the door, so they're being more flexible with pricing [and] terms."
By Louis Altmann | July 2, 2024
The firm joins the likes of Quinn Emanuel and Gibson, Dunn as a market leader on NQ pay.
By Cheryl Miller | July 1, 2024
Chief Justice Patricia Guerrero said the judicial branch is "committed to doing our part" to close California's $47 billion statewide budget deficit.
By Michelle Morgante | July 1, 2024
The suit filed by Jones Day contends researcher Norbert Peekhaus violated his employment agreement with Agensys Inc. by disclosing trade secrets stemming from his work at the company. Peekhaus later worked for the University of California Regents, who are represented by Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman.
By Kate Brumback | The Associated Press | July 1, 2024
Lawyers for the rapper and several other defendants had filed motions seeking the recusal of Fulton County Superior Court Chief Judge Ural Glanville after he held a meeting with prosecutors and a prosecution witness at which defendants and defense attorneys were not present.
By Cheryl Miller | July 1, 2024
Limits on solicitations to arbitrators faced opposition from arbitration companies and the business groups that use them.
By Kat Black | July 1, 2024
The suit, originally filed in November 2021, consolidated two separate whistleblower retaliation complaints brought by Dr. Jeannie Lochhead and Dr. Michele Nelson, both former faculty members at UC Riverside's Department of Psychiatry and Neuroscience. The case, which alleged that the UC Regents violated the California Whistleblower Protection Act, went to trial on May 17.
By Colleen Murphy | July 1, 2024
"The R.H./T.L. decision allows juveniles to avoid extensive periods of harm by being placed on Megan's Law for long periods of time beyond the point where they can clearly prove they are unlikely to pose a threat to anyone. The next step, and the only way I can think to improve the decision, would be to do risk assessments before placing an individual on Megan's Law," said James Maynard, chair of the Megan's Law Subcommittee of the Criminal Law Section of the New Jersey State Bar Association.
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