Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | November 17, 2020
"I'm facilitating a process. I'm not dominating it," said Connecticut attorney Christopher Kriesen.
By Greg Land | November 12, 2020
The proposed class action is one of several the company is fending off over claims its Workforce Reduction Program illegally discriminates against older workers.
By Jane Wester | November 12, 2020
Prosecutors flagged the case for the court's review early on after discovering that a U.S.-based subsidiary of Huawei was paying for Mao's legal team, which included attorneys from Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati and Thompson & Knight. Mao waived the conflict, and his trial was set for 2021.
By Alaina Lancaster | November 12, 2020
The class action complaint—filed by attorneys from McManis Faulkner, Bartlit Beck and Korein Tillery—is the latest lawsuit asserting consumers' property rights over their personal data.
By Amanda Bronstad | November 11, 2020
Plaintiffs lawyer Jonathan Cuneo, who brought his own antitrust class action last month against Google, has sought to create an MDL that would include his own case and 10 others, including the Justice Department's lawsuit, which is pending before U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta, of the District of Columbia. Most of the other cases are in the Northern District of California.
By Scott Graham | November 9, 2020
Partners Charles Verhoeven and David Perlson defended Google against an NPE represented by Susman Godfrey in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas.
By Alaina Lancaster | November 9, 2020
The agreement resolves allegations that the videoconferencing technology company misrepresented its security features, including claims that the platform implemented end-to-end encryption when it did not.
By Dan Clark | November 9, 2020
"The challenge is to understand where the landmines are and to develop processes and systems that appropriately calibrate the risk," Chris Handman, the first general counsel of Snapchat, said.
By Alaina Lancaster | November 5, 2020
The agency reports that the action involving proceeds from the illicit marketplace—which offered drugs and services such as hacking—is the largest cryptocurrency seizure in DOJ history.
By Cheryl Miller | November 4, 2020
The measure's passage threatens to upend legal challenges to gig companies' practice of classifying drivers as independent contractors.
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