By Jenna Greene | May 14, 2017
Just wondering—did you as a firm by chance notice how the president treated Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein last week? Did it give you pause before staking the reputation of your 144-year-old firm on a pledge that Trump has no financial ties to Russia, nope, no siree?
By Miriam Rozen | May 11, 2017
Two tax experts with high-profile government and private practice experience have joined New York boutique Kostelanetz & Fink and will launch the firm's new Washington, D.C., office.
By Lizzy McLellan | May 9, 2017
Blank Rome has brought on two lawyers from Withers Bergman to its tax, benefits and private client group in New York, including the former leader of Withers' U.S. tax investigations practice.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | May 8, 2017
A New Jersey federal court will consider for a second time whether it should force a sale of the home of a tax-indebted man and his wife, following a precedential ruling issued Monday by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.
By Mike Scarcella | May 3, 2017
Brent McIntosh, the Sullivan & Cromwell partner nominated to be general counsel to the U.S. Treasury Department, reported earning nearly $2.9 million in income from the firm last year, according to his financial disclosure on file at the U.S. Office of Government Ethics.
By Lizzy McLellan | April 29, 2017
The Lower Merion School District has lost its appeal against a Montgomery County lawyer and other residents over a tax increase, after the Commonwealth Court disagreed with the district over the finality of a trial court injunction.
By John Council | April 28, 2017
In a stinging defeat to federal prosecutors in a major public corruption case, a Dallas jury Friday acquitted John Wiley Price of bribery and conspiracy charges.
By Katelyn Polantz | April 26, 2017
Details surrounding the president's tax plan are still sketchy. But one thing's for sure: Equity partners at the country's biggest law firms would enjoy a massive cut if the plan becomes reality.
By Cheryl Miller | April 25, 2017
A Southern California assemblyman on Monday shelved legislation that would have blocked cities from taxing streaming video services such as Netflix and Hulu.
By Max Mitchell | April 5, 2017
Philadelphia's newly imposed beverage tax is not a simple levy on sweetened drinks, but instead a “power grab” by the city that could have negative effects for the state tax structure, an attorney representing a group challenging that tax told an intermediate appellate court.
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