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August 09, 2011 | Legaltech News

Corporate Blueprint to Prevent Criminal Conduct

In 1991, the U.S. Sentencing Commission released guidelines for how companies can prevent crimes such as corporate fraud, bribery, and collusion. After 20 years, former U.S. Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty finds that the Commission's blueprint is no longer the ultimate guide and lays out five key issues a company's compliance program must address.
5 minute read
September 01, 2008 | National Law Journal

Corrections: September 1, 2008

1 minute read
June 26, 2012 | The Legal Intelligencer

Gindrow v. Cheltenham York Road Nursing Rehabilitation Center, Inc., PICS Case No. 12-1061 (C.P. May 16, 2012) Mazer Moss, J. (6 pages).

The court's order declining to limit the Pennsylvania Department of Public Welfare's estate claim was proper and should be affirmed.
4 minute read
May 24, 2013 | Daily Business Review

View From the Bench - Foreclosures and Civil Discovery

The Bankers Club 2 S. Biscayne Blvd. 1 Biscayne Tower, 14th Floor Miami, FL 33131
2 minute read
May 10, 2005 | The Recorder

Under lock and key

Most litigators agree - certain court documents should be confidential. But when defendants try to make public information private, plaintiff lawyers and open-court advocates get upset. Increasingly, plaintiff lawyers say that while discovery fights are old hat, defendants over the last few years -- particularly in mass torts -- have been trying to pass off incriminating public documents as confidential trade secrets. Defense lawyers don't dispute the charge, saying it's a matter of defending their clients
7 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book Pennsylvania Causes of Action, 12th Edition Authors: GAETAN J. ALFANO, RONALD J. SHAFFER, JOSHUA C. COHAN View this Book

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August 06, 2009 | Law.com

With Jan Baker Aboard, Latham Seeks to Break On Through to the Debtors' Side

When D.J. "Jan" Baker left Skadden in May to join Latham & Watkins, many wondered what it would mean for Skadden, which had just lost two M&A lawyers to Kirkland & Ellis. But his departure was more of a sign of change for Latham, which has always been a stalwart on the creditors' side in corporate bankruptcies. "There's been a recurring question mark in the restructuring world as to when Latham would move towards developing a debtors practice in New York," says Baker. "The answer is now."
5 minute read
May 05, 2008 | Daily Report Online

Attorney: Atlanta narcotics unit in fatal raid skirted laws

3 minute read
December 22, 2005 | Law.com

Weighing the Risks of Product Testing for Litigation

The first trial has gone badly, your company's product is threatened with even more litigation, and though your scientists are sure the product is safe, there are no definitive studies to counter the plaintiffs' experts' speculative opinions. Is it a good idea to conduct company-sponsored studies to disprove the plaintiffs' theories and assist the company in winning lawsuits? The short answer: Weigh the risks, according to Crowell & Moring's William Anderson and Michael Martinez.
9 minute read
January 04, 2012 | New York Law Journal

Realty Law Digest

Scott E. Mollen, a partner at Herrick, Feinstein and an adjunct professor at St. John's University School of Law, reviews recent cases involving the rejection of a single man's offer to purchase a co-op, bedbugs and the implied warranty of habitability, and a stop work order on a project the NYC Department of Buildings had previously approved.
18 minute read
January 18, 2006 | New York Law Journal

Stephenson v. City of New York

Firefighter's Late Claim Deemed Timely as City Had Actual Notice, Suffered No Prejudice by Lateness
1 minute read