By Phillip Bantz | September 16, 2019
Sridhar Thiruvengadam, who worked for Cognizant for more than two decades, agreed to pay a $50,000 civil penalty and cooperate with investigators as part of a settlement offer that the SEC accepted on Sept. 13.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Stacey A. Usiak and Andrew P. Yacyshyn | September 16, 2019
Compliance with the new laws aimed at combatting workplace sexual harassment is not as simple as sending employees to a training.
By Karen A. Schuler, BDO USA | September 16, 2019
Organizations seeking compliance with the growing number of data privacy regulations will need to remain vigilant, especially for organizations that rely heavily on personal data.
By Mike Scarcella | September 16, 2019
The conciliation agreement was not an admission by Sprint of any violation, and there has been no adjudication that Sprint violated any laws.
By Sue Reisinger | September 13, 2019
Funding from disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, a convicted sex offender who took his own life while imprisoned, has raised questions for general counsel at universities about how to handle reputational risks from tainted donors.
By Cheryl Miller | September 12, 2019
"What we've done in California for the last 20 years is tell our kids that marijuana is medicine," U.S. Attorney McGregor Scott said in an interview, "and with very, very, very limited exceptions, that's not true."
By Phillip Bantz | September 12, 2019
Dan Haley joins Sprinklr as its annual revenue has grown to more than $300 million and as it prepares for an initial public offering. The company's clients are some of the world's biggest brands, including Amazon, McDonald's, Microsoft and Nike.
By C. Ryan Barber | September 11, 2019
"If it had to create the unclassified report today, Dr. Valentin Gapontsev would not be listed among oligarchs in the Russian Federation," a U.S. Treasury official said in a letter Wednesday.
By C. Ryan Barber | September 10, 2019
SEC Chairman Jay Clayton has some tough words about foreign counterparts not living up to anti-bribery enforcement, and Microsoft's Brad Smith is on a media whirl -- and has some things to say about competitors. Scroll down for Who Got the Work and more.
By Sue Reisinger | September 10, 2019
President Gregory Fenves ordered the review in mid-March, at the same time as the university fired head tennis coach Michael Center after he was caught accepting a $100,000 bribe in the nationwide college admissions scandal.
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