0 results for 'undefined'
Bike Rider's Lawsuit Gains Traction
In the 1990s, a Stamford lawyer who liked to run on Greenwich's beaches filed a much-publicized lawsuit that eventually opened the wealthy community's parks to out-of-towners. Now a 77-year-old Stamford bicyclist has picked up the torch.Baron and Boone, Bringing in the Big Buck$
As of June 30, Haynes and Boone had raised $147,000 for President Bush, placing the firm as the fourth-largest contributor to Bush's campaign among organizations in the nation and the top law firm contributor in Texas to any presidential political candidate ever.Seahawks' Hill apologizes after arrest in suburban Atlanta
Court Dismisses Attorney's Bid to Sue Former Banking Clients
Linda Grant Williams, who practiced at Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman and Greenberg Traurig, claims Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs conspired to block a new bond structure she developed, and the banks' threats led the two law firms to fire her.'Holistic' Review in Federal Securities Litigation
In recent years, plaintiffs in federal securities cases have seized on language from two landmark U.S. Supreme Court decisions in an attempt to erode the heightened pleading standards of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act.View more book results for the query "*"
In re C/S 12th Avenue LLC, petitioner v. The City of New York, respondent
Hudson Yard Redevelopment Meets Environment Hurdle; �Hard Look�, �Reasoned Elaboration� Satisfied SEQRAAfter Flood of Amicus Briefs, Justices Will Take Up Microsoft Patent Case
Jesup & Lamont cuts nearly all staff
Jesup & Lamont Inc. said Tuesday it has terminated nearly all of its staff and stopped paying most salaries after financial regulators ordered the 133-year-old brokerage and investment banking firm to stop making new securities trades.Trending Stories