0 results for 'Hahn Loeser'
Firms didn't let financial catastrophe get in their way
Four years into the case against AIG, the insurer collapsed along with the rest of the finance sector. Despite that monumental obstacle, plaintiffs' co-counsel at Labaton Sucharow and Hahn Loeser & Parks secured settlements surpassing $1 billion.Microsystems Greets Q1 With Enhanced Tools and New Customers
Microsystems enhanced its DocXtools for Microsoft Office recently and added new law firm customers interested in converting Word documents between versions 2002-2007 and 2010, as well as scrubbing metadata from documents on the desktop and documents attached to e-mail sent from smartphones.Competition Growing for Lead Counsel Status in Big Securities Suits
When shareholder class actions began rolling in against Toyota Motor Corp., senior partners from more than a half-dozen of the nation's most prominent law firms piled into a Los Angeles courtroom to make their case for lead counsel status. The Toyota litigation was the latest high-profile case to attract a set of plaintiffs' securities firms that have become increasingly competitive regulars in the fight for lead counsel status in big-ticket shareholder litigation.Firms Vie for Lead Roles in Big Litigation
When shareholder class actions began rolling in against Toyota Motor Corp., senior partners from more than a half-dozen of the nation's most prominent law firms piled into a Los Angeles courtroom to make their case for lead counsel status. Among them were lawyers from Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd and Labaton Sucharow. In the end, Gerald Silk, a partner at New York's Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann, accepted the coveted position.On Appeal: Health care ruling says you can't force people into insurance contracts
The majority held the federal government can't make individuals purchase health insurance from private companies. But that one unconstitutional mandate doesn't mean the entire Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional.Refusal to talk settlement doesn't merit sanctions
A defendant's failure to participate in settlement talks after its inventor and expert witness disclosed adverse information in depositions wasn't ground for sanctions, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has ruled.Trending Stories
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