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March 07, 2003 | Law.com

Punitive Measures

The California Supreme Court hears arguments Wednesday in a legal malpractice suit against Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein about the firm's choice not to seek punitive damages in a class action over a toxic chemical accident. David Becht, who represents the plaintiffs, says that his clients' claim was, " taken away by the attorneys, so they didn't have the opportunity to seek punitive damages." Attorneys say a plaintiffs' victory could expose all lawyers to potentially ruinous liability.
6 minute read
April 05, 2010 | The Recorder

Monthly Lateral Report

The latest lateral moves.
6 minute read
February 01, 2007 | The American Lawyer

PRO BONO SCORECARD 2007: Scoring the Firms

27 minute read
March 17, 2010 | The Legal Intelligencer

Survey Shows Pa. Law Firms Don't Shine When It Comes to Diversity

Whether they moved up or down in the ranks of this month's Diversity Scorecard in Legal affiliate The American Lawyer, most Pennsylvania-based firms have little to show when it comes to the number of minorities in their ranks.
5 minute read
October 01, 2010 | The Recorder

Monthly Lateral Report

The latest lateral moves.
15 minute read
November 30, 2006 | Law.com

For One Law Firm, an Unquiet Death

Not since the crash of Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison has a law firm flamed out as spectacularly as Coudert Brothers. The firm once had 28 offices and 600 lawyers, and though its financial performance was fading, it was seen as a pioneer in international law. But that scope also helped undermine Coudert, which faces lease obligations from Singapore to San Francisco, and difficulties accessing money in Frankfurt and Tokyo. It was once common for Coudert partners to speak many languages. Now its creditors do.
13 minute read
May 30, 2008 | Law.com

The A-List (51-200)

Lawyers like to lament the passing of their fabled past, when partners knew each other on sight, firms contented themselves to operating in one ZIP code and junior associates were not a menacing anonymous horde threatening to take out their frustrations via the blogosphere. As it happens, in the big-firm world those days aren't gone, they've just moved to the Am Law Second Hundred ranks, where firms are prosperous and growing steadily but retain the possibility of old-fashioned cohesion.
23 minute read
June 13, 1999 | Law.com

California Judges Could GetInsurance for CJP Probes

4 minute read
Irell Moves to Toss Suit Claiming Bill Koch Corralled Oxbow Exec
Publication Date: 2013-01-17
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Irell & Manella has handled some interesting litigation lately for the uber-billionaire William Koch, including a suit claiming that Koch was duped into buying wine that once supposedly belonged to Thomas Jefferson. Now Irell partner John Hueston is playing defense for Koch, hoping to fend off claims that the Oxbow Group founder detained an Oxbow executive in an Old-West ghost town on his Colorado ranch.

May 14, 1999 | Law.com

Commission Can Keep on Stinging Judges

The Cal. Commission on Judicial Performance can continue to issue "stinger" letters to state judges and doesn't have to provide full-blown hearings to do so, the California Supreme Court ruled Thursday. But in deciding a closely watched challenge of CJP practices, the justices handed a mixed bag to the commission and the judges who may be hauled before it.
6 minute read

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