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3rd Circuit: Proof of 'but-for' Causation Required in FCA Retaliation Cases
The Third Circuit has ruled that plaintiffs must prove "but-for" causation in workplace retaliation lawsuits stemming from False Claims Act whistleblowing activity.Cozen O'Connor Keeps Up Growth Spurt With Saul Ewing, Lindquist Hires
The firm has added to its private client, litigation and public and project finance practices.Womble Bond Dickinson Lands Patent Pro—and Other 'On the Move' News
Patent partner Kean DeCarlo joins newly trans-Atlantic Womble, plus other comings, goings and partner promotions.Steadiness and Growth for Many Pennsylvania Firms in 2017
A look back on this year's law firm news in Pennsylvania.Four Lessons Companies Can (and Should) Learn From 2017's Data Breaches
After a year full of cyber breaches, attorneys may want to take these lessons into the coming year.The Legal's 10 Most Popular Stories of 2017
The bulk of The Legal's 10 most-read stories of the year fit pretty neatly into three categories: unhappy news for law firms, attorneys in trouble and upheaval in the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office.Which Pennsylvania Law Firms Grew Most in 2017?
Mergers and group hires made for big gains at several Pennsylvania firms.Daily Dicta: Cheers to the 2017 Litigators of the Week Winners
From fighting the travel ban to negotiating Michael Flynn's plea deal to suing the DJ who groped Taylor Swift, the lawyers featured each Friday as our Litigators of the Week have been in the middle of the year's biggest stories. Here's a look back at the winners.Delaware Supreme Court Denies $14M Payment on Michigan Wind Farm
The Delaware Supreme Court on Monday ruled that Exelon General Acquisitions' decision to change the location of a Michigan wind farm allowed the company to avoid a $14 million earn-out payment to Deere & Co. stemming from its 2010 purchase of Deere's wind-energy business.Unethical Fee-Splitting Agreements Not Automatically Unenforceable, Justices Say
In a closely watched case that waded into the murky ethics of business arrangements between lawyers and nonlawyers, a majority of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court could agree on only one thing: fee-splitting arrangements between lawyers and nonlawyers are not per se unenforceable just because they violate attorney ethics rules.Trending Stories
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