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Dealmaker of the Week: Wachtell's Adam Emmerich
Emmerich and founding firm partner Martin Lipton led Wachtell's team advising France's Publicis Groupe in its $35.1 billion merger with Omnicom Group to create the world's largest advertising group.Why Corporate Counsel Should Lose Sleep Over the Federal Wiretap Act
That's right, general counsel, be afraid, be VERY afraid to shut those peepers: e-mail snooping nightmares.Bridging the Gap, Part II: How In-House Counsel Can Cut Budgets While Law Firms Can Increase Profits
Surprise, surprise: In-house attorneys and outside counsel on legal fees and slashing budgets — are any lawyers shedding light on ways to bridge this gap? • ALSO SEE: Start Your Engines! | Expert Archive • Get Out of It — Welcome to Dodge City, Old Chap • All Right, GCs ... Let's Get UNIFIED!!!Late-Breaking Deals in 2010 Paint Rosy M&A Picture for 2011
Think You Know AFAs? Think Again: The Seven Biggest Myths of Alternative Fee Arrangements
The king of the gods would want you to: By separating fact from fiction, corporate law departments can better understand the benefits of using appropriate fee arrangements instead of experiencing the pitfalls of AFAs when they are employed inappropriately.Texas Attorneys Defend Clients Accused of Genocide in Rwanda
Tom Moran and William E. Taylor III are Houston criminal-defense attorneys who've left behind comfortable law practices in Texas to represent clients before the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.Q&A: Jim Carroll, Matsunichi Inc.
The GC at the U.S. subsidieary of a Japanese consumer electronics company talks about running a one-person legal shop and what it takes to really darken his days.Gay Marriage: A Changing Legal Landscape
Getting personal and political about same-sex marriage is now becoming a recurrent experience - all well-timed in light of the pending arguments and recent decisions coming from courts and legislatures across the states.Drug used in Okla. execution could gain wider use
MCALESTER, Okla. (AP) - A sedative Oklahoma used to execute a death row inmate that is commonly used to euthanize animals could become more popular because of a nationwide shortage of a key ingredient in several states' lethal injection formulas, death penalty experts say.Trending Stories
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2024 Trends Report Mid-Year Special Edition: Update on Outside Counsel Billing Rates
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AI in Private Equity: A Guide for Gaining an Early Advantage
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Why Are So Many Law Firms Suddenly Embracing Digital Transformation?
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2025 State Legislative Sessions
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