New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Harvey M. Stone and Richard H. Dolan | February 7, 2019
In their Eastern District Roundup, Harvey M. Stone and Richard H. Dolan report on several significant recent decisions, including: a case in which defendant was found liable to pay restitution in a “pump and dump” stock fraud; a case in which the judge declined to dismiss an action challenging the government's termination of Haiti's Temporary Protected Status designation; and a case dismissing a claim by a Medicare provider challenging the procedures of the New York Department of Health in pursuing its Accelerated Collection Campaign.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By John P. Quinn and Adam Bronstein | February 7, 2019
In three opinions issued in 2018, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit clarified several pleading requirements for putative class action securities complaints.
By Jenna Greene | February 6, 2019
It's not uncommon for winners and losers to spin the results of a jury verdict, but rarely will two sides offer flatly contradictory takes on what went down.
By Jenna Greene | February 6, 2019
It's not uncommon for winners and losers to spin the results of a jury verdict, but rarely will two sides offer flatly contradictory takes on what went down.
By Meredith Hobbs | February 6, 2019
Terry Weiss, a Greenberg partner for a decade, and Stefanie Wayco, an associate there since 2016, said they were attracted to DLA's depth in securities litigation.
Delaware Business Court Insider | Commentary
By James H. S. Levine and Douglas D. Herrmann | February 6, 2019
Section 220(d) of the Delaware General Corporation Law permits a director to inspect a company's books and records for purposes reasonably related to the director's position as a director.
By C. Ryan Barber | February 5, 2019
The former head of the SEC's whistleblower team has some thoughts on the Trump-era commission's move to restrict awards. Plus: we've got the back story on how a Covington partner won, then lost, the ZTE compliance monitorship. Scroll down for Who Got the Work, moves and more. Thanks for reading!
By MP McQueen | February 5, 2019
White-collar lawyers at Akerman cited backlogs and delays at agencies, but they also expressed concern about possible long-term damage if experienced government lawyers and other employees decide to leave public service as a result of federal appropriations lapses and shutdowns.
Corporate Counsel | Expert Opinion
By Matt Queler and Michael Won | February 1, 2019
The tea-leaf readers and wishful thinkers have been predicting an FCPA corporate enforcement slowdown for years. Prior to 2015, sentiment was, in effect, that FCPA enforcement had enjoyed a long run, but all “good” things must come to an end.
By Nicolas Morgan | January 31, 2019
A federal appellate court recently poured cold water on the idea that someone in the U.S. selling securities to investors outside the U.S. might evade the SEC's reach.
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