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August 08, 2007 | National Law Journal

King & Spalding Ups Ante to Match Alston's Pay for First-Years

King & Spalding matched Alston & Bird's $15,000 increase in associate starting pay Wednesday, but made no mention of pay increases for senior associate classes. The raise brings first-year partner-track associates to $145,000, effective Jan. 1. Recruiters predict King & Spalding will go on to establish a pay scale with less compression or a more merit-based system, where pay for more senior associates is tied to performance. Another option, said one: Pay bigger bonuses to midlevel and senior associates.
5 minute read
January 16, 2007 | The Legal Intelligencer

Duane Morris Enters Singapore Market, Has Plans for Vietnam

Duane Morris Chairman Sheldon Bonovitz is making good on his plan to grow the 600-attorney firm to over 1000 lawyers with offices across the globe.
3 minute read
August 09, 2007 | Texas Lawyer

Lawyers Earn Actual Cash in Virtual World

Firms are opting to expand into the relatively uncharted territory of Second Life, an online simulated universe with more than 8 million users � and growing.
11 minute read
China and SEC Reach Agreement on Deloitte Audit Docs
Publication Date: 2013-07-15
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For the first time, China's securities regulator has agreed to turn over audit documents related to an ongoing SEC investigation of a U.S.-listed Chinese company.

December 30, 2009 | The Recorder

Symantec's Legal Firewall

Lobbying the feds' new cybersecurity czar is just one of the challenges facing Scott Taylor and his 160-member legal, public affairs, government affairs and brand protection team.
5 minute read
September 11, 2009 | Law.com

Maine Agrees Not to Enforce Predatory Marketing Law

A group of trade associations and a publishing company have succeeded in stopping a Maine law against marketing to minors that exposed them to private lawsuits. The state Legislature was worried about companies using information they gathered from minors online to market prescription drugs, but the organizations say the Maine Predatory Marketing Law violates the First Amendment and would have barred newspapers from publishing stories about minors and colleges from marketing to prospective students.
4 minute read
May 31, 2005 | Law.com

In Anderson Case, Uneasy Role for Firms

A handful of law firms face being pulled into the largest tax fraud case in U.S. history. Though none has been accused of wrongdoing, business lawyers who worked with indicted telecom baron Walter Anderson and the companies he controlled risk becoming embroiled in the courtroom brawl between prosecutors and Anderson's defense attorney, Abbe Lowell, who is strongly signaling that his defense will examine the advice Anderson received from lawyers and accountants.
9 minute read
December 20, 2010 | The Legal Intelligencer

Judge Dismisses Challenge to Voting Rights Act Provision

A federal district judge late Thursday dismissed a constitutional challenge to a critical part of the nation's landmark Voting Rights Act -- one of two lawsuits aiming for the U.S. Supreme Court.
4 minute read
September 15, 2005 | Law.com

Baker & McKenzie to Acquire New York Office of Coudert

Ending weeks of speculation, Baker & McKenzie has announced its acquisition of most of the New York office of the pioneering international law firm, Coudert Brothers, which recently announced it would disband its global network. The firm's larger merger discussions with Chicago-based Baker & McKenzie had fallen through, but expanding in New York with the addition of 70 Coudert lawyers -- including about 25 partners -- meets one of Baker & McKenzie's long-term objectives.
3 minute read
September 01, 2006 | Law.com

Pa. Federal Judge Throws Out Bad Faith Claim

A third-party insurer cannot be sued for bad faith if it ultimately settles a case within policy limits even if it allegedly refused to settle a claim despite the insured's admission of liability and instead engaged in "delay tactics" that led to four years of litigation, a federal judge has ruled. U.S. District Judge Berle M. Schiller predicted that the Pennsylvania courts would hold that there is no recognized cause of action against an insured for delaying settlement of a third-party claim.
5 minute read

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