By Susan DeSantis | November 30, 2017
William Perlmuth, former chairman of Stroock & Stroock & Lavan and a partner for 35 years, died Nov. 24 at his home in Manhattan. He was 88.
By Meghan Tribe | November 29, 2017
The Wall Street firm, which took on its first debtor side bankruptcy role nearly six years ago, is advising Pacific Drilling in its Chapter 11 case in Manhattan.
By Christine Simmons | November 29, 2017
Even as they imitate Cravath on bonuses, some firms are adding fine print that shrinks the pot for certain associates and sweetens it for others.
By Josefa Velasquez | November 29, 2017
Brooklyn Assemblyman Joe Lentol introduced legislation Monday that would increase the state's four departments to five by creating a Second Department, North consisting of the counties in the 9th Judicial District immediately north of New York City.
By Colby Hamilton | November 29, 2017
Yisroel Schulman, who departed the legal services provider in 2015, diverted millions from NYLAG in what AG Schneiderman's office said was a breach of fiduciary duty.
By Colby Hamilton | November 29, 2017
The move came after the plaintiff in the suit filed an emergency appeal to the Second Circuit, pleading for a stay on the geography-based process used to allocate the organ transplants.
By Colby Hamilton | November 29, 2017
Responses to certified questions from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit to Nevada's top court led the panel to uphold the district court's dismissal of Adelson's suit against the National Jewish Democratic Council.
By Jason Grant | November 29, 2017
Paul Karan, admitted to the bar in 1961 and most recently a partner at Spizz Cohen & Serchuk, asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege to the grievance committee.
By Josefa Velasquez | November 29, 2017
Republican Assemblyman Steve McLaughlin, the recently elected Rensselaer County executive, is barred from having interns work in his office after the ethics committee found that he violated the Assembly's harassment, discrimination and retaliation policy.
By Erin Mulvaney | November 29, 2017
Meet Ari Wilkenfeld, a longtime civil rights and employment lawyer in Washington, who's representing the woman who brought sexual misconduct claims this week against NBC "Today" show host Matt Lauer.
Presented by BigVoodoo
This event shines a spotlight on the individuals, teams, projects and organizations that are changing the financial industry.
BTI provides leading tax professionals from financial institutions with unmatched tools and resources.
Honoring outstanding legal achievements focused at the national level, largely around Big Law and in-house departments.
CORE RESPONSIBILITIES AND TASKS:(1) Tasks and responsibilities include:Reviewing and negotiating commercial agreements for internal business...
Boutique midtown Manhattan law firm specializing in sophisticated real estate litigation & representation of commercial and residential ...
Description: Fox Rothschild has an opening in the Boston, MA office for a Litigation Associate with 3 to 5 years of experience. The ideal ca...