0 results for 'White Case'
Ouster of UnitedHealth CEO Rachets Up Stock Options Scandal
Chief executives caught in the stock options scandal may find it harder to keep their jobs now that a CEO as mighty as UnitedHealth's William McGuire has fallen. "Not only are the dominoes falling, but the dominoes are getting bigger," says Anthony Sabino, a business law professor at St. John's University in New York City. The fall of a big domino like McGuire -- who engineered UnitedHealth's rise into the nation's second-largest health insurer -- could spark the descent of others as well, Sabino said.View more book results for the query "White Case"
San Francisco Boutique Jettisons Catch-All Approach
Minami Tamaki is streamlining its practice areas for a tighter focus on immigration, employment, personal injury, civil and business litigation. The San Francisco-based firm recently dropped its criminal defense and family law groups, two areas the partnership said were too specialized to be supportable by the rest of the firm. "In order to be profitable, we needed to be efficient," says managing partner Brad Yamauchi. "Everyone re-evaluated their practice and asked, 'Is it viable as part of the firm?'"Calif. AG Sues Alleged 'Madoff Middleman'
California Attorney General Jerry Brown set off another round of Madoff mania Tuesday with the announcement that his office is suing prominent money manager and philanthropist Stanley Chais for allegedly funneling millions to Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities. The complaint accuses Chais of serving as a "Madoff middleman" and seeks restitution for $25 million in civil penalties. Brown's office said Chais reaped more than $270 million in fees while charging 25 percent on profits derived from Madoff-related investments.Plaintiffs Say Settlements Unlikely in Suits Against Ford
Negotiations aimed at settling a number of age discrimination lawsuits against Dearborn, Mich.-based Ford Motor Co. have broken off, according to two plaintiffs. At least two class action suits and several individual suits on behalf of current and former managers claim the company's evaluation system favored younger, so-called "diversity" candidates.House Prepares to Move Anti-Terrorism Compromise
Police would be able to secretly search the homes of suspects, tap their phones and track their Internet use under anti-terrorism legislation moving toward final approval in the U.S. House of Representatives. House leaders said the final bill will be voted on today, with Senate approval expected later this week. But the bill may hit a snag on the Senate side as lawmakers tinker with an ethics amendment applying to federal prosecutors.Trending Stories
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