Search Results

0 results for 'Hodgson Russ'

You can use to get even better search results
April 02, 2012 |

ADR in the Criminal Context: An Idea Worth Considering

Harold J. Ruvoldt, a partner at Hodgson Russ, writes that the difference between the approaches to discovery between the criminal and civil systems has long been the subject of debate, and the motion practice in federal criminal matters leaves many defense and prosecuting attorneys wondering if there could not be a more efficient way to narrow the issues. The time seems ripe to consider an alternative approach.
6 minute read
December 14, 2010 |

O'Donnell Nominated for U.S. Justice Post

2 minute read
October 21, 2010 |

NY Partners Switching Firms, On the Move

1 minute read
October 11, 2011 |

White Collar Crime

In this Special Report from the New York Law Journal: "Turning the Tables," "The Dilemma of the Hamstrung Defendant," "Energy Markets: Enforcement in an Age of Rising Prices" and "The Constitution's Unanimity Requirement: On What Must the Jury Agree?"
2 minute read
May 16, 2003 |

Stock buyers settle with company for $25 million

a class of purchasers of Rent-Way Inc. common stock reached a $25 million settlement on April 18 with the company and its officers. Class representative Cramer Rosenthal McGlynn, a New York-based investment bank, alleged that the Erie, Pa.-based rent-to-own business issued misleading statements and announcements regarding its finances and operations, causing the class to purchase the stock at artificially inflated prices. The class sued Rent-Way; a number of its top executives; its former contro
1 minute read
December 15, 2010 |

NY Lawyer Nominated to Head Bureau at DOJ

Denise E. O'Donnell, who quit as state deputy secretary for public safety to protest what she saw as the misuse of the State Police by Governor David A. Paterson, has been nominated by President Barack Obama as director of the Bureau of Justice Assistance.
2 minute read
November 30, 2009 |

S Section

5 minute read
May 09, 2008 |

Pension Probe Will Snare 'Hundreds' of Attorneys, N.Y. Attorney General Predicts

New York Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo predicted Thursday that 'hundreds and hundreds' of attorneys will ultimately be implicated in his office's investigation of government entities improperly enrolling non-employees in public pension funds. While his investigators have only exposed the "tip of the iceberg" so far, Cuomo said the problem is not limited to a few school districts that were initially exposed for having put attorneys doing work for the districts on the public pension rolls.
5 minute read

Resources

  • The Positive Impact of AI at Small Law Firms: 4 Key Insights

    Brought to you by LexisNexis®

    Download Now

  • Will Generative AIs Transform Legal Services? Defensibility and Security Must Be a Focus

    Brought to you by HaystackID

    Download Now

  • Unlocking the Power of Early Case Assessment Workflows

    Brought to you by Integreon

    Download Now

  • Good Legal Technology is Good Business: A Case for Bringing Employment Issues In-House

    Brought to you by LexisNexis®

    Download Now

NEXT