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July 19, 2005 | Law.com

Cashing In

The cash bonus staged a major comeback in 2004, with the average payout to GCs soaring a phenomenal 31 percent over the prior year. Why the bonanza? "The risks of being corporate counsel are going up," says consultant Joel Henning, so it seems appropriate that rewards are going up, too. And while some see the bonuses as mere signs of strong company performance, others think they're part of a bigger shake-up in executive compensation.
8 minute read
January 20, 2005 | Law.com

Backing Up Is Hard to Do

Nobody likes copying files to protect data. But if you've ever suffered a severe computer crash, you know the value of backups. Once upon a time, a lawyer had to put everything on tape. Now, less tedious options exist. You've got optical media. You've got tiny, portable disk drives. Perhaps best of all, you've got online services, which keep your precious files in a remote location -- so they won't go up in flames along with your office (knock on wood).
9 minute read
November 09, 2007 | The Recorder

AG, Governor Sue Over Emissions

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Attorney General Jerry Brown, right, who have separately sought the climate change spotlight in the past, put on a team front Thursday in announcing the state's suit against the federal EPA.
4 minute read
July 26, 2006 | National Law Journal

Alston & Bird Snags Outsourcing Group From Pillsbury

Alston & Bird has raided two partners from Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman to establish a global sourcing practice, but rumors that Alston might open offices in London or Germany are premature, said the firm's managing partner, Ben F. Johnson III. "The global sourcing area is one that is strategically important in branding a law firm as having the most sophisticated product offerings," Johnson says. "This is not something that the majority of American law firms has any ... depth of expertise in."
3 minute read
October 25, 2009 | The Legal Intelligencer

Groups in court over horse breed name

Two groups that aim to preserve the Nokota, a breed of horse whose origins in the northern Great Plains are a matter of debate, are tangled in a legal dispute over the rights to the name.
5 minute read
October 01, 2005 | Legaltech News

In the Wake of Katrina

Guide to web resources that can help.
7 minute read
May 08, 2002 | New York Law Journal

New Deals

In a deal valued at about million, Seattle-based biopharmaceutical company Immunex Corp., announced last week that it had agreed to sell its Leukine cancer treatment business to Berlin`s Schering AG, a global research-based company engaged in the discovery, development, manufacture, marketing and sale of pharmaceutical products. Immunex was required by the Federal Trade Commission to sell the cancer treatment business after it agreed to a friendly takeover by Thousand Oaks, Calif.-based biotechnology Amgen
4 minute read
August 04, 2003 | New Jersey Law Journal

IT at Kmart

As Kmart Corp. emerged from bankruptcy in May, the lawyers who defend the retailing giant in tort liability lawsuits prepared for workloads to pick up. Many cases had come to an abrupt halt in Jan. 2002, when Kmart filed for bankruptcy protection. The bankruptcy's end also signaled renewed activity for Kmart's litigation Extranet, the secure, Web-based system it uses to manage and monitor public liability cases throughout the United States
7 minute read
March 08, 2012 | New York Law Journal

Reverse Environmental Impact Analysis: Effect of Climate Change on Projects

In His Environmental Law column, Michael B. Gerrard, who is Andrew Sabin Professor of Professional Practice and director of the Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School, and senior counsel with Arnold & Porter, explores the protocols that various government agencies have issued for reverse environmental impact analysis, and discusses one pending case on the issue.
14 minute read
May 03, 2001 | Law.com

London Insider: Gap in Top 100 IT Plans

A survey into the use of information technology by the U.K.'s top 100 law firms revealed some surprising gaps. Many firms still lack case, document, knowledge or client relationship management software, confirming Charles Christian's suspicion that most law firms have not progressed beyond word processing and bookkeeping applications. Also in Christian's report from London: the unique discovery problems posed by digital evidence.
8 minute read

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