By C. Ryan Barber | Mike Scarcella | August 25, 2020
Welcome to Compliance Hot Spots, our weekly comprehensive roundup of white-collar, regulatory and compliance news and trends. Thanks for reading, and please keep the emails coming with feedback and tips!
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Ellen Bardash | August 25, 2020
In their complaint, shareholders alleged Oncology Supply Pharmacy Services passed itself off as a legitimate, licensed pharmacy but evaded oversight from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and that AmerisourceBergen's directors didn't meet their duties to the corporation by missing and ignoring red flags.
By Ann C. Kim and Jamie Hennelly | August 25, 2020
The economic uncertainty created by COVID-19 has regulators like the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Enforcement ramping up its efforts to identify and prevent fraud in the wake of COVID-19, says Hogan Lovells' Ann Kim and Jamie Hennelly.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Ernest Edward Badway | August 25, 2020
Spurred on by the problems encountered by the SEC, DOJ, and many courts, in December 2019, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill with strong bi-partisan support explicitly banning insider trading and providing greater enforcement authority to the SEC and DOJ.
By Alaina Lancaster | August 21, 2020
The lawsuit, filed in July, claims Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg "wants Blacks to be seen but not heard."
By C. Ryan Barber | August 18, 2020
Welcome to the Compliance Hot Spots dispatch! Lots to dig into this week -- and please keep sharing your feedback and tips. Thanks, always, for reading.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Ellen Bardash | August 17, 2020
The complaint alleges the company's market capitalization value plummeted from a $13 billion high in December 2016 to $6.4 billion about eight months later.
By Catherine Wilson | August 17, 2020
Ex-Hertz CEO and Chairman Mark Frissora was accused of pursuing three tracks that ended up inflating pretax income by $235 million.
By Stephen Blake | August 14, 2020
The continued widespread business uncertainty caused by COVID-19 and the associated higher market volatility provide a fertile environment for event-driven securities litigation, says Simpson Thacher & Bartlett's Stephen Blake.
By Stephen Blake | August 14, 2020
The continued widespread business uncertainty caused by COVID-19 and the associated higher market volatility provide a fertile environment for event-driven securities litigation, says Simpson Thacher & Bartlett's Stephen Blake.
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