By Ross Todd | December 6, 2019
After less than 30 minutes of deliberations, jurors found that Musk did not defame British cave explorer Vernon Unsworth, whom the CEO referred to as a "pedo guy" on Twitter.
By Tom McParland | December 6, 2019
Elliott Broidy and his Los Angeles-based investment firm failed to establish, in the eyes of the panel, that a longtime Moroccan diplomat met the commercial activity exception under the Vienna Convention, which generally protects diplomats from civil lawsuits and criminal prosecution.
By Scott Graham | December 5, 2019
The Federal Circuit rules that the wireless giant is entitled to a jury trial over infringement of its standard-essential patents. The decision wipes out a 2017 bench trial in which U.S. District Judge James Selna had established the "top-down" methodology for evaluating SEPs.
By Alaina Lancaster | December 5, 2019
The testimony opened a multi-week administrative hearing in San Francisco as the company and its Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe counsel continue to defend against the U.S. Department of Labor's claims of systemic pay disparities leveled in a 2017 lawsuit.
By Sue Reisinger | December 5, 2019
It has been a stressful week for Google chief legal officer Kent Walker and his in-house legal department with four fired employees, who had been trying to unionize the employees, announced they were filing unfair labor practices complaints against Google, accusing the company of retaliating against them for workplace organizing.
By Jane Wester | December 5, 2019
Huawei also plans to argue that the FCC rule was unlawfully vague and violated the company's right to due process, according to the Jones Day attorneys.
By Mike Scarcella | December 4, 2019
The government told the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit it would not further question or contest novel issues tied to Dentons' third-party litigation finance arrangement.
By Scott Graham | December 4, 2019
The ride-hailing company says that an inventor who was seeking $584 million in damages should have known the game was up once the Patent Trial and Appeal Board found his patent claims indefinite.
By Ross Todd | December 4, 2019
The First District Court of Appeal upheld a trial court ruling denying class certification in a gender discrimination case brought on behalf of 135 women software engineers at Twitter who claim they were disproportionately passed over for promotions.
By C. Ryan Barber | December 3, 2019
The ruling, under seal in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York, came almost six months after federal prosecutors argued that an "obvious conflict of interest" should prevent the Sidley Austin partner from representing Huawei.
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