New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael B. Gerrard and Edward McTiernan | November 9, 2022
Several regulations exist to protect chemical and waste facilities against extreme weather events. It is not clear that they all are being adequately implemented, and the existing rules leave many holes.
By Dan Roe | November 7, 2022
Five GOP senators wrote the leaders of 51 large ESG practices on Nov. 4 to threaten antitrust scrutiny over alleged "collusive action to restrict the supply of coal, oil, and gas."
By Alexander Lugo | November 4, 2022
Panelists at the International Bar Association Conference in Miami discussed heightened regulatory scrutiny and public disapproval stemming from representing tarnished actors.
By Brad Kutner | November 4, 2022
Making proxy votes more readable aims to inform investors, but it's yet to be seen if it will be another costly addition to information glut as SEC Chair Gary Gensler fine-tunes enforcement actions agencywide.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Francesca Fulchignoni and Tim Anderson | November 4, 2022
Case teams will need to embrace new approaches, use new technologies, and be willing to step outside of traditional, static workflows to defensibly meet the dynamic nature of emerging data sources.
By Dan Roe | November 3, 2022
Governments in Latin America, Europe and Asia are implementing formal FDI policies or informally blocking deals for politically motivated reasons.
By Brian Lee | November 3, 2022
New York Attorney General Letitia James said the $523 million deal with Teva Pharmaceuticals, Ltd., subsidiary Teva Pharmaceuticals US and affiliate arms of the Tel Aviv, Israel-based company is the largest such agreement during her four years in office.
By Andrew Goudsward | November 2, 2022
The DOJ antitrust division brought its first criminal monopolization case since 1977, months after officials indicated the enforcement tool was back on the table.
By Jacqueline C. Wolff and Emma C. Jogerst | November 1, 2022
Although Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco's new Memo — as is true of all DAG memos governing an Administration's corporate prosecutions policy — is ostensibly intended as guidance to the attorneys at DOJ and the various United States Attorney's Offices around the country, it is helpful as a guide to the defense community in advising corporate clients.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Robert Stern and Sarah Coyne | October 31, 2022
Individual accountability is at the forefront of the government's enforcement strategy—and that includes gatekeepers.
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