By Emily Saul | June 18, 2024
The suit claims the global security company has failed to disclose integral financial information to enable current shareholders assess the value of their holdings pre vs. post-sale.
By Brian Lee | June 18, 2024
A judge since 1996, New Lebanon Town Justice Nevers resigned effective May 30 while agreeing to never seek or accept judicial office in the future. The commission accepted that stipulation.
By Brian Lee | June 18, 2024
The New York Court of Appeals rejected Trump's "automatic" appeal "upon the ground that no substantial constitutional question is directly involved."
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Patricia Collins | June 18, 2024
With decisions expected in July, this will give employers and employees a short period of time to prepare for compliance, should the rule survive these challenges. Employers should prepare by identifying impacted employees and reviewing existing agreements
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Elliot Pisem and David E. Kahen | June 18, 2024
In two recent Tax Court decisions, it was determined that, although there had been a loss in value attributable to activities ultimately determined to be crimes, no theft loss was allowable to the petitioners because no crime in the nature of theft had been committed against the petitioners themselves to deprive them of property that they owned.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Peter Brown | June 18, 2024
Without specific legal guardrails, the use of AI tools must be approached with caution. This article addresses some of the issues that users and companies using AI applications should be considering in addressing the privacy of users and their transactions.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Jason P.W. Halperin and Erin Galliher | June 18, 2024
In criminal trials conducted in New York State, judges almost never send the written jury instructions back to the jury room for the jurors to review and consult while they are deliberating. This article explains the legal history of the current practice and why, in the authors' opinion, it's time to allow judges in New York to send the written jury instructions back to the jury room in criminal cases.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Katryna L. Kristoferson and David Paul Horowitz | June 18, 2024
This month's Practical New York Practice™ column dives into the third, frankly mysterious formula set forth in CPLR 2104 to create an enforceable stipulation: "An agreement between parties or their attorneys relating to any matter in an action…reduced to the form of an order and entered."
By Samson Amore | June 18, 2024
"Expanding the private funds world, in terms of fund formation and really helping to build up that capacity in the New York office, and at the same time, adding to a very robust family office practice that's here—that's really the best of both worlds."
By ALM Staff | June 17, 2024
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decisions editors.
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