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Businesses as Consumer Fraud Act Plaintiffs
The narrow contours of corporate standing under the CFA.OCC: Principal-Protected Products in Hedge Fund Transactions
Alice Yurke, a partner at Morrison & Foerster, dissects a September 2004 report from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.Bucks Judge OKs Weddings by Internet Ministers
A minister ordained over the Internet who has no congregation and no church to preach in is nonetheless empowered under Pennsylvania law to preside over marriage ceremonies, a Bucks County judge has ruled.Wiley Rein, Insurer Sanctioned $1.25 Million
Failure to disclose a key insurance document for the Port Authority at the World Trade Center in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks and other discovery abuses will cost Wiley Rein and Coughlin Duffy. The firms and the insurance company they represented have been sanctioned $1.25 million by a New York judge, who said the company's document destruction and attorneys' misleading statements added millions of dollars to the cost of prosecuting suits on behalf of people who suffered losses in the 2001 attacks.View more book results for the query "*"
Backdating Issues Create a Taxing Situation in More Than One Way
More bad news for corporate executives caught in the stock options backdating quagmire: Millions in unpaid taxes on the gains will be due by the end of this year. In a recent bulletin that is expected to become final soon, the IRS followed through on threats to cut no slack, saying that executives who received backdated options and whose companies are restating earnings should pay the additional tax. The ruling could affect the top 20 officers at 152 companies that have disclosed backdating issues.Consumers Buy Goods, Not Lawsuits
The role of private attorney general under the Consumer Fraud Act should not become a mere business for opportunistic intermeddlers who deliberately create their own victimhood.Narrative's origin sways verdict
Russell D. Waldon won a defense verdict in Fulton County Superior Court Sept. 10 in what appeared to be a challenging case: His client admitted causing the car crash for which the plaintiff's lawyer asked the jury for nearly $1 million for pain, suffering, permanent injury and two surgeries resulting in $62,000 in medical expenses.Annual Updating Amendments to Child Support Guidelines
Notice to the bar.Trending Stories
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