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Miami Lawyers Get $16.7M Against Florida insurer—Now They Want $20M More
"We went in and did this form of alternative dispute resolution, ... and they said, 'We're not paying. We want to present our defenses,'" plaintiff counsel said about Heritage Property and Casualty Co.Fraudulent Injury Lawsuits and Unnecessary Surgeries Exposed in Trip-and-Fall Scheme
Personal injury attorney George Constantine and orthopedic surgeon Andrew Dowd were convicted by a Manhattan federal jury late last year for knowingly profiting from a massive $31 million trip-and-fall accident scheme.Antitrust Blitzkrieg Against Google Tests Company on Myriad Fronts
Tech analyst Joseph Teasdale said the intense regulatory scrutiny could hamstring Google as it seeks to outmaneuver rivals, leaving it "very wary about wielding its full power."As Privacy Laws Proliferate, So Does Mismatch Between Companies' Notices, Practices
"It takes a mature organization to have processes that require a product developer or a marketer to always check in with their privacy team before they move ahead," said Lynn Parker Dupree, partner at Finnegan.Practitioner Pitfalls Surrounding the Earned Upon Receipt Fee
An earned upon receipt fee is a fee that a lawyer charges upfront, before performing any actual work on a client's matter. A lawyer may claim that this type of fee is "earned" once paid, and therefore nonrefundable.View more book results for the query "*"
Bankruptcy Transferring Control to Parent Was Filed in Good Faith
In recent years, as extensive pre-bankruptcy planning has evolved, bankruptcy filings frequently involve affiliates of larger companies, engineered with a structuring of liabilities in mind. This is especially relevant in the area of mass tort litigation. The question of whether these targeted filings are for a legitimate bankruptcy purpose or should be dismissed has been the subject of significant high-profile litigation.Rising Silicon Valley Drug Use Puts GCs in Tough Spot
"Terminating a star employee—or any employee—based solely on the fact that the employee ingested a sub-perceptual amount of a psychedelic drug may not make business sense," according to Vincent Sliwoski, managing partner of Harris Bricken Sliwoski.People in the News—July 6, 2023—Rubin Glickman, Giampolo
Marc Robert Steinberg, managing partner of Rubin, Glickman, Steinberg and Gifford, presented a session at the Pennsylvania Bar Association (PBA)'s Criminal Law Symposium.US Treasury AML Whistleblower Program: An International Game Changer
In late December 2022, President Joe Biden signed into law the AML Whistleblower Improvement Act that substantially ups the ante for both domestic and overseas financial services companies that have AML compliance and reporting obligations, including banks, branches, and agencies of foreign banks, securities broker-dealers, and insurance companies.Trending Stories
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