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October 01, 1984 | National Law Journal

Continental's Lifeline Spun by Lawyers

As well as anyone, H. Rodgin Cohen knows that history has a way of topping itself. In 1974, as a 30-year-old associate at New York's Sullivan & Cromwell, the wiry young Harvard graduate worked overtime to help devise a plan to protect the depositors of Franklin National Bank in what was then the nation's largest post-World War II bank failure. Ten years later to the day, Cohen found himself up to the elbow in a similar task: salvaging the $41 billion Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago, a money center bank that was nearly 12 times the size of the Long Island-based Franklin. As Continental's outside counsel, Cohen would play the central role in devising the largest bank bailout in U.S. history. That rescue was finally completed last week after the bank's shareholders overwhelmingly voted to approve the plan.
30 minute read
December 01, 2003 | Law.com

Profile: A Litigator Takes the Helm At Symbol

Despite predictions in these pages that Peter lieb was likely to get the GC spot at International Paper Company [The Shortlist, October 2002], the associate GC did not get the top legal job when William Lytton went to Tyco International, Ltd., last year. IP decided to look outside for Lytton's replacement-and Lieb moved up into the GC ranks by going to Symbol Technologies, Inc. Like his former boss, Lieb, 47, has joined a company with very public legal problems. Symbol, the New York- based manufacturer of b
3 minute read
November 18, 2010 | New York Law Journal

Virtually Huge

6 minute read
January 12, 2012 | Corporate Counsel

Class Actions Top 2012 Workplace Litigation Concerns

A plan to identify and address class action vulnerabilities deserves a place at the top of any general counsel's priorities list for 2012, according to a leading workplace litigation lawyer.
4 minute read
July 15, 2005 | The Legal Intelligencer

Local Lateral Moves Take Significant Jump in 2005

Only halfway through this calendar year, The Legal has already tracked more lateral partner moves in Philadelphia than during all of 2004.
7 minute read
Law Journal Press | Digital Book White Collar Crime: Business and Regulatory Offenses Authors: Otto G. Obermaier, Robert G. Morvillo (deceased), Robert J. Anello, Barry A. Bohrer View this Book

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March 18, 2005 | Law.com

A Stella Career

Rading in Guinness stout and Johnnie Walker scotch, Sabine Chalmers now has a lighter drink: Stella Artois. InBev, the world's largest brewer and maker of beers like Stella and Beck's, appointed Chalmers as its GC in January. The 39-year-old has the right taste buds for the job, having spent almost 12 years with Diageo plc, maker of international spirits as well as Guinness. She was most recently GC of Diageo North America. Chalmers says she wasn't looking to leave Diageo when a headhunter called about the
3 minute read
February 13, 2013 | The Legal Intelligencer

Feds Charge Lackawanna Guardian With Tax Evasion

Federal prosecutors have charged the Lackawanna County guardian ad litem with two counts of tax evasion and two counts of filing a false federal income-tax report.
5 minute read
October 26, 2001 | New Jersey Law Journal

Daily Decision Alert: Vol. 9, No. 206 -- October 26, 2001

12 minute read
April 01, 2010 | Law.com

Locke Lord Hit With Suit by Former Income Partner

A former non-equity litigation partner at Locke Lord Bissell & Liddell is suing the firm, claiming it stiffed him on interest payments for capital contributions tied to the finalization of the merger between Chicago's Lord, Bissell & Brook and Texas-based Locke Liddell & Sapp in 2007. Robert Crowder, who began his legal career at Lord Bissell in 1998 and became an "income" or non-equity partner in 2004, claims that Locke Lord deprived him of at least $10,000 by failing to return his capital to the bank and make interest payments.
5 minute read
February 08, 2011 | Daily Report Online

Foreclosure king's fall mirrors that of industry

During the housing crash, it was good to be a foreclosure king. David Stern was Florida's top foreclosure lawyer, and he lived like an oil sheik. He piled up a collection of trophy properties, glided through town in a fleet of six-figure sports cars and, with his bombshell wife, partied on an ocean cruiser the size of a small hotel.
11 minute read

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