New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Sarah Lightdale, Ian Shapiro and Linh Nguyen | July 15, 2020
Although a number of federal courts have found code of conduct statements to be non-actionable puffery, given the uncertainty in the face of the novel coronavirus pandemic, public companies should review their codes of conduct and revise them if necessary to mitigate litigation risk.
By Ryan Tarinelli | June 23, 2020
Groups with deep pockets have lined up on both sides of the issue, including organizations that have dished out millions of dollars in political donations over recent years.
By Ryan Tarinelli | June 8, 2020
New York Attorney General Letitia James reported Saturday that her office has received more than 7,000 price gouging complaints tied to COVID-19 since the coronavirus pandemic started.
By Jason Grant | May 27, 2020
What exactly occurred with the alleged poaching or "conspiracy designed to destroy" Men Women N.Y. Management by Elite Model Management was not before the Appellate Division, First Department, an injunction order on soliciting models away was. That legal issue was decided. The substance of why 55 models suddenly left Men Women N.Y. last spring and summer must still be hashed out.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Steve Cohen and James Wiseman | April 17, 2020
The federal government has begun unleashing $2 trillion in economic stimulus in response to COVID-19. We can all hope that this money will be used to help bring this monumental crisis to a close. But history tell us that when the government coffers open, fraud, waste, and abuse quickly follow.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Thomas J. Hall and Judith A. Archer | April 16, 2020
In their Commercial Division Update, Thomas Hall and Judith Archer discuss the "mere continuation" doctrine as one exception to the general rule in New York that the liabilities of a selling business do not travel to the acquirer.
By Tom McParland | December 20, 2019
The court said that Nasdaq had "established, in multiple respects," that Exchange Traded Fund Managers Group had kept millions of dollars in management fees, including a $1.5 billion cybersecurity fund known by its ticker symbol HACK.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Robert A. Schwinger | November 19, 2019
In his Blockchain Law column, Robert Schwinger discusses two recent California federal court rulings—'Terpin v. AT&T' and 'Fabian v. LeMahieu'—which indicate that the ability of negligence claims involving cryptocurrency thefts to survive dismissal at the pleading stage will turn on the plaintiff's ability to adequately plead the elements of a negligence claim: duty, breach, causation and damages.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Barry Black and Jonathan Robert Nelson | May 30, 2019
New York law prohibits trustees of religious congregations from hiring and firing clergy. The power to do so resides with the membership itself.
By Robert Storace | May 13, 2019
Connecticut is leading a 44-state coalition, alleging price-fixing by 20 makers of generic drugs. Their lawsuit seeks payments of billions of dollars to these states.
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