0 results for 'Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice'
Alston & Bird Boosts Revenue, Head Count
Several big litigation matters and a steady stream of transactional work power the firm's solid gains.'John Doe' Company Fights to Remain Anonymous in CFPB Investigation
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is facing a new test to the scope of the agency's power, as a "John Doe" company heads to court to block the public disclosure of its name while fighting an investigation into its core business practices.Big Firms Raid Remnants of KWME, Plus More Lateral Moves
As King & Wood Mallesons' European arm continues to crumble, big firms around the world pick up some partner-level pieces; Baker McKenzie ditches its ampersand; DLA Piper heads to Chile; a former K&L Gates litigation leader starts his own firm; and other notable moves from throughout The Global 100.23 Big Firms in Atlanta Achieve Perfect Score on LGBT Equality Ranking
Six Atlanta-based firms were among the Am Law 200 firms that achieved a perfect score on the Human Rights Campaign Foundation's annual Corporate Equality Index.In-House Counsel Profile: Edward Gallagher
"We aren't like the old stereotype of the naysaying lawyer, and I'm very happy and proud to run that type of a team."Womble Carlyle Takes Lead for Bankrupt Digital Sports Network
After a tumultuous 2016, New York-based Scout Media Inc. filed for bankruptcy in the Big Apple last week, owing $356,800 to Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati and $150,000 to Friedman Kaplan Seiler & Adelman. The debtor has hired Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice to advise it in Chapter 11 proceedings.GC of NCR Discusses Move to Midtown, Other Moves
The Atlanta-based Fortune 500 company is preparing to cash in on Atlanta's technology boom with its new offices in Midtown.Best Legal Advisers 2016: Bond Dickinson
Bond Dickinson managing partner Jonathan Blair on what makes the firm a Best Legal Adviser for 2016-17Legal Experts See No Easy Answers to Twitter's Hate Speech Problem
On social media, it's probably inevitable that "haters gonna hate." But Twitter this week took steps toward making it more difficult for people to spread racist and offensive speech. Lawyers say that, while Twitter isn't governed by the First Amendment, it may want to look to U.S. Supreme Court jurisprudence for guidance.Trending Stories
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