0 results for 'Hunton'
83 Firms to SEC: Don't Tread on Me
The firms all signed onto an amicus brief opposing the regulator's effort to compel Covington & Burling to disclose confidential client information.Jan 6. Committee Lawyers In-Demand as Top Trial Boutique Hires Another
Eleven committee attorneys have joined law firms in recent months, as demand for government-facing practices soars.Key New California Privacy Laws
California employers need to start telling their workers (and potential workers) when and why they collect their personal information, according to Julia Trankiem and Veronica Torrejón of Hunton Andrews Kurth.Willkie Picks Up Two Investigators From Jan. 6 Committee
Set to join Willkie Farr & Gallagher on Wednesday are Timothy Heaphy, who served as chief investigative counsel to the U.S. House of Representatives' Jan. 6 Committee, and Soumya Dayananda, who was senior investigative counsel for the committee.Anywhere But Here: Lawyers Wanted This Samsung Case in California—But It's Headed to a Slower Court
One plaintiff-side firm said in court papers that taking a case to trial takes 34 months in the Northern District of California, 50 months in the District of New Jersey, 51 months in the District of Nevada and 44 months in the Southern District of New York.View more book results for the query "Hunton"
2023 Could Be a Stronger Year for Energy Industry IPOs Amid Rising Investment
2023 IPOs include an energy industry IPO that raised $115 million. Texas capital markets lawyers say this may be a sign that there will be more energy industry work this year than last.Changes to Noneconomic Damages Standard on the Horizon in Texas Supreme Court
Attorneys for the defendants cite the dissenters' lament: "The high court has given the intermediate appellate courts little guidance to govern ... factual sufficiency of noneconomic damages," or how to "conduct a 'meaningful review' of them."Biden Nominee Failed Senator's Constitutional Pop Quiz. Here's What Ex-Judges Had to Say
"[For] [a]nyone who's been in that position, it evokes a visceral reaction," said former Middle District of Pennsylvania District Judge John E. Jones III.'What Did Everybody Else Get?': Standardized Noneconomic Damages Proposed
"It seems we're replacing one arbitrary option with another," Justice Jimmy Blacklock said. "The economic value of that person and their earnings has no connection to the suffering of their loved ones."Lawyers Are Watching as Texas High Court Weighs Standards for Noneconomic Damages
Attorneys for the defendants cite the dissenters' lament: "The high court has given the intermediate appellate courts little guidance to govern ... factual sufficiency of noneconomic damages," or how to "conduct a 'meaningful review' of them."Trending Stories
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