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After Two Years at Cadwalader, Woolery Leaves for Hedge Fund
Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft announced Tuesday that James Woolery, who had been poised to become the storied Wall Street firm's chair this month after spending nearly two years as chairman-elect, would leave to cofound a new investment venture. Patrick Quinn, Cadwalader's managing partner-elect since January 2014, will assume sole leadership of the firm that hired Woolery from JPMorgan Chase as its highest-paid partner.Court Mulls Whistleblower Protection for 'Watchdog Employees'
In a case being closely monitored by the business community, the New Jersey Supreme Court is considering whether so-called "watchdog employees" can be protected by the state's whistleblower law if they are fired for, in essence, doing their jobs.Fundraising Rule for Judicial Candidates Divides Justices
The U.S. Supreme Court's long-running divide over limits on money in elections played out again on Tuesday in a constitutional challenge to a Florida rule prohibiting judicial candidates from personally soliciting contributions.Four Ways to Protect Your iPhone and iPad Battery
Maximize your mobile device's operating time and life span.Litigation Boutique Kobre & Kim Launches S.F. Outpost With IP Focus
The new office will led by partner Michael Ng, the former head of Kerr & Wagstaffe's IP practice.View more book results for the query "*"
NCAA, PSU to Settle $60M Dispute, Repeal Sanctions
Parties on both sides of a dispute over the validity of a consent decree the NCAA imposed against Penn State announced the sanction will be repealed under a proposed settlement agreement.Hagens Berman Denies Conflict in Accord With GSK
Plaintiffs firm Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro said there was no evidence to suggest its deal to dismiss 28 thalidomide cases against GSK in exchange for the drug company's agreement not to seek sanctions against the firm was in conflict with its clients' interests.Luzerne County Defender's Termination Suit Can Proceed
Luzerne County Chief Public Defender Albert J. Flora Jr.—who, before being forced out, had sued the county for underfunding the office—can continue with his previously dismissed wrongful-termination suit, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has ruled.Matter of James A., [Index Number Redacted by Court]
Court Denies Own Motion to Disqualify Attorney for Children in Neglect PetitionTrending Stories
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