By C. Ryan Barber | June 23, 2020
Welcome to Compliance Hot Spots. We've got the latest on the DOJ's new FARA guidance—and what it means for lawyers. Plus: AG William Barr's leadership is facing new criticism and questions—and we'll hear a lot more Wednesday at the House Judiciary hearing. Scroll down for Who Got the Work, headlines and more. Thanks for reading!
Corporate Counsel | Commentary
By Ryan McConnell | June 23, 2020
Crystal Jezierski, former head of Walmart Inc.'s global ethics program, discusses how to run an ethics program remotely.
By Mike Scarcella | June 21, 2020
"Audrey Strauss will undoubtedly continue the important work of the deputy U.S. attorney," Geoffrey Berman said as he announced her 2019 appointment.
By Frank Ready | June 18, 2020
The prevalence of remote working could be changing the way that some corporate legal departments and their organizations think about cybersecurity, but that also means reevaluating privacy and data protection risks as well.
By C. Ryan Barber | June 16, 2020
Welcome to Compliance Hot Spots. Attorney General WIlliam Barr's former chief of staff prepares to take the reins of the DOJ's criminal division. Covington's Rob Kelner guides Amazon through a congressional investigation, and prosecutors face possible discipline for conduct in a sanctions case. Scroll down for Who Got the Work, moves and much more! Thanks for reading!
By Phillip Bantz | June 16, 2020
Also, the company's former in-house leaders react to allegations that six ex-employees harassed and terrorized a blogger and her husband.
By Anne Bagamery | June 16, 2020
The investigations are preliminary in nature but significant for introducing a new focus of competition regulation: away from market dominance and toward a company's role as a "gatekeeper" to market access, lawyers said.
By Robert Cruz, Smarsh | June 16, 2020
A new NACD report says directors will need to become more fluent in the latest tech advances as companies push further toward the digital frontier. But adopting tech without the necessary compliance guardrails in place can be a formula for disaster.
By Andrew Burt, bnh.ai | June 15, 2020
The longer regulators wait, the more widely used algorithmic decision-making systems become. In the process, the concrete harms these technologies can cause are becoming clear. So what can companies do?
By Scott Pink and John Dermody, O'Melveny | June 12, 2020
Governments and businesses alike are considering how to leverage new technologies to make contact tracing efforts more effective. But such innovative contact tracing methods raise a host of privacy concerns, forcing a reckoning with how we balance privacy and public health.
Presented by BigVoodoo
This conference aims to help insurers and litigators better manage complex claims and litigation.
Recognizing innovation in the legal technology sector for working on precedent-setting, game-changing projects and initiatives.
Legalweek New York explores Business and Regulatory Trends, Technology and Talent drivers impacting law firms.
Our established bankruptcy practice is seeking an attorney with a commitment to client satisfaction, an enthusiasm for bankruptcy law, and d...
McCarter and English s Chambers-ranked Government Contracts group is seeking an experienced, diligent, and proactive government contracts as...
McCarter & English, LLP is actively seeking a junior level commercial litigation associate admitted to practice in Connecticut, with a d...