0 results for 'Stroock'
Revising the Horizontal Merger Guidelines…And Why It Matters
Bruce H. Schneider, a partner at Stroock & Stroock & Lavan, and Katherine Puzone, an associate with the firm, write that about the time of the last substantial revision of the Horizontal Merger Guidelines, officials at the FTC wrote that "the real test of the success of the guidelines would be their acceptance by the bench." By that standard, the Guidelines have had enormous success, but it is precisely because of that high degree of judicial acceptance that the antitrust agencies now face a serious jurisprudential challenge in updating the Guidelines.The Churn: Lateral Moves and Promotions in The Am Law 200
Just two weeks into the new year, the lateral market has been very active. This week, several litigators--especially ones in the IP arena--have found their way to new firms. Among them: Bert Deixler, the former managing partner of Proskauer's Los Angeles office, who joins Kendall Brill & KliegeFederal Judge Denies Fee, Calls Legal Work 'Incompetent'
An attorney who resigned from the New York bar amid allegations of misconduct should not receive any fee for his work in settling a $2.4 million medical malpractice suit, a federal judge in Brooklyn has determined.The 17th Amendment And Vacant Senate Seats
Jerry H. Goldfeder, special counsel at Stroock & Stroock & Lavan, writes: The vacancy provision in the 17th Amendment appears simple enough: if a state has opted to allow for a temporary appointee to the Senate, she may serve until an election is required pursuant to that jurisdiction's election code. In New York, in the circumstances of Ms. Clinton's vacancy, newly appointed Senator Kirsten Gillibrand does not face the voters until November 2010, almost two full years after assuming office. This revelation may have come as a surprise to most voters, indeed, to most lawyers who do not specialize in the area. The news is especially startling after an election year in which so many people were actively engaged.Subletting in Co-ops: Continuing Challenge for Boards
In their Co-ops and Condominiums column, Richard Siegler, of counsel to Stroock & Stroock & Lavan, and Eva Talel, a partner at the firm, write that co-op proprietary leases generally restrict and may even prohibit subletting, and courts have generally upheld such restraints as reasonable, in furtherance of the co-op's objectivesTexas Jury Hits Apple With Nine-Figure Verdict; Apple Scrambles to Limit the Damage
Apple owes a company called Mirror Worlds at least $208.5 million under the willful infringement verdict a jury reached Friday in the Eastern District of Texas in Tyler — but confusion over just how hard the jury intended to hit Apple is the subject of an emergency motion Apple filed Sunday. A jury found that Apple willfully infringed three patents involving how documents are displayed on a computer screen.Trending Stories
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