By C. Ryan Barber | November 22, 2019
U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III in Alexandria, Virginia, noted the lingering questions in the case, saying Jerry Chun Shing Lee "must have given them something of value" but that "nobody knows for certain precisely what he gave the intelligence officers."
By Ross Todd | November 22, 2019
In a tentative order, San Francisco Superior Court Judge Anne-Christine Massullo had more than 30 questions about the terms of a deal that plaintiffs lawyers at Lichten & Liss-Riordan and Postmates counsel at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher reached to settle claims that delivery workers had been misclassified as independent contractors.
By Dan Clark | November 22, 2019
The trend of diversity is spreading, and earlier this week Rep. Emanuel Cleaver, D-Missouri, held a panel of in-house counsel from tech companies to learn more about what they do to foster diversity and inclusion.
By Alaina Lancaster | November 20, 2019
Next week, the company will begin providing answers to the agency's 19 interrogatories issued in June.
By Xiumei Dong | November 20, 2019
The federal government has been watching closely for national security issues related to companies' data collection practices, and law firms are making sure they have the talent to address those issues for clients.
By Amanda Bronstad | November 19, 2019
Frank, director of the Center for Class Action Fairness at the Hamilton Lincoln Law Institute, wrote in a Tuesday filing that the deal unfairly compensates some customers over others and awards excessive fees to plaintiffs' attorneys.
By Ross Todd | November 18, 2019
Lawyers at Keller Lenkner claim that moves the company and its counsel at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher took to push a new arbitration agreement directly to their "Dasher" clients via the delivery app skirted ethical rules against communicating directly with a represented party. Gibson Dunn lawyers have previously called Keller Lenkner's arbitration tactics a "shakedown."
By Angela Morris | November 18, 2019
Blitzsafe Texas, based in Marshall, has filed 15 lawsuits in four years against the world's largest automakers for allegedly infringing its two patents for a device that integrates a mobile device with a car's stereo system. The company sued General Motors Co., Fiat Chrysler Automobiles and Maserati North America.
By Scott Graham | November 15, 2019
The court's involvement is sure to reignite a 50-year-old debate over how much, if any, software should be subject to copyright, and the contours of the fair use defense in the digital age.
By Ross Todd | November 14, 2019
Presiding Justice Barbara Jones of California's First District Court of Appeal said plaintiffs' own witnesses suggested "there wasn't a uniform policy" to establish commonality.
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