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Federal Judge Proposes 'Stopgap' Solution
U.S. District Judge Franklin S. Van Antwerpen believes that federal trial judges should be allowed to write opinions that explain their rulings after an appeal is filed -- as some state court trial judges do -- so that appellate judges won't be forced to guess or remand the case for t-crossing and i-dotting. Antwerpen and others argue that a simple rule change would significantly reduce federal appellate judges' workload and act as a stopgap to save the courts from a deluge of cases.Class action litigation is beginning to take shape over allegations that major banks manipulated Libor, the benchmark rate used to calculate interest on trillions of dollars in securities globally. On Monday the federal district court judge hearing the litigation consolidated 20 class complaints, and appointed interim class counsel.
Searching for a Holy Legal Grail in Israel
Where high-tech communities flourish, law firms follow. And that means U.S. lawyers are on their way to Israel, which now ranks as the second fastest-growing high-tech region in the world.Texas. So far, however, U.S. law firms eager to exploit Israel's high-tech explosion have been held at bay by restrictive regulations governing the practice of law there. Yet that's now beginning to change.Rambus is still paying for its decision to shred reams of documents before it launched a litigation campaign against a big swath of the semiconductor industry. The latest blow came on Friday, when the judge most sympathetic to Rambus over the years ruled that the company spoliated evidence and signaled that he would reduce a $397 million judgment that Rambus won against rival SK Hynix in 2009.
Longtop Financial Technologies, the Chinese company whose fortunes were upended last year by a billion-dollar accounting scandal, has yet to file an appearance in federal multidistrict litigation accusing it of massive securities fraud. After reading the most recent opinion in the case, we can understand why Longtop might be avoiding U.S. courts.
Wilson Sonsini Helps Crank Up the Volume on Dolby's IPO
The sound of a single stockholder unloading 17 million shares reverberated in the ears of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati partner Thomas DeFilipps on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange for the closing bell -- heard anew in surround sound -- on the first day of Dolby's IPO. Dolby's public launch was no ordinary tech company offering. One challenge was deciding how the IP of Ray Dolby, the company's founder and for many years its only stockholder, would be transferred to the company.EEOC: Kelley Drye Compensation System Discriminates Against Older Partners
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission sued Kelley Drye & Warren on Thursday for its use of a compensation system the agency claims discriminates against attorneys based on age. The EEOC claims Kelley Drye discriminated against labor and employment partner Eugene D'Ablemont, 79, and other partners by forcing them to give up their equity at 70 and earn less than younger attorneys in the firm with similar collections and billings. Kelley Drye's managing partner said the firm does not believe the suit has any merit.Trending Stories
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