The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Justin Henry | December 8, 2020
The 36-year-old corporate litigator says she's bringing major institutions in finance, insurance and sports to her new firm.
By Ross Todd | December 7, 2020
The $125,000 fine that the casual dining chain agreed to pay for misleading investors about the depth of its pandemic-spawned problems doesn't seem to provide a recipe for further private actions.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Ellen Bardash | December 2, 2020
The complaint alleges that while executives were touting progress on chip development, a material defect in the manufacturing process prevented Intel from producing chips in an economically sustainable way
By Ellen Bardash | December 2, 2020
The complaint alleges that while executives were touting progress on chip development, a material defect in the manufacturing process prevented Intel from producing chips in an economically sustainable way
By Ellen Bardash | December 2, 2020
The complaint claims company executives and board members knew about a manufacturing defect while touting progress on new chip development.
By Tom McParland | December 2, 2020
The indictment charges a disbarred former SEC attorney submitted attorney opinion letters under the Palm Beach County attorney's name for years.
By Tom McParland | December 2, 2020
The indictment, unsealed Wednesday in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, alleged that Richard Rubin, who was disbarred in 1995, had illegally practiced securities law by submitting attorney opinion letters to the SEC from 2011 through late 2018.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Robert L. Hickok, Jay A. Dubow and Kaitlin Meola | December 1, 2020
After nearly a decade in operation, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC or commission) voted to amend the rules governing its whistleblower program, which Congress created in 2010 to assist the SEC in discovering and prosecuting securities law violations by providing "monetary incentives for individuals to come forward and report possible violations of the federal securities laws to the SEC."
By C. Ryan Barber | Mike Scarcella | December 1, 2020
Welcome to Compliance Hot Spots, our weekly snapshot on white-collar, regulatory and compliance news and trends. Thanks for reading, stay safe and let's dive in.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Mark Lebovitch, Gregory Varallo and Thomas James | November 25, 2020
Corporate issuers have recently adopted highly aggressive poison pills that seek to quell stockholder activism; investors have responded by seeking expedited trials to establish the boundary lines of Delaware law.
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