The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Feige M. Grundman and Steven R. Miller | April 18, 2018
We are only a few months into the Trump presidency's second year, and immigration remains at the forefront of policy and public debate.
By Caroline Spiezio | April 18, 2018
Mack, who was formerly in-house at ClearSlide and Zoosk, was going to take some time off, but then found a job that she couldn't turn down.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Alyssa R. Angotti | April 18, 2018
“Resume builder.” It's a term we are taught at a young age. We join the band and play sports to get into a good college. We join clubs and volunteer to be attractive to law schools. We pull all-nighters with the hope of making Law Review. Before we know it, our resume building is over and we are first year associates. There is no longer a need for extracurricular activities, right? Wrong!
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Jason Domark, Charles C. Kline and Reid Kline | April 18, 2018
Imagine that your client invested in a foreign partnership, and the “partner” ran off with the funds. Or maybe your client relied on the wrong offshore wealth adviser, or placed funds with the wrong trust company.
By Stephanie Forshee | April 17, 2018
Though Uber is not a named defendant in the complaint, experts said the company will still have plenty of work on its hands in dealing with a defamation suit recently filed against former Uber security analyst Richard Jacobs.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Benjamin H. McCoy | April 17, 2018
The past year has seen a large up-tick in federal activity aimed at curbing the nation's opioid crisis. Of particular note, on July 13, 2017, the Medicare Fraud Strike Force arrested 412 defendants in a nationwide health care fraud enforcement directive. Of these, 120 were charged for actions taken in relation to opioids.
By Ross Todd | April 16, 2018
The lawsuit, set to go to trial in July, confronts the company with billions in potential damages.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Charles F. Forer | April 16, 2018
Having started on the arbitrator-disqualification road and having started the process of (unintentionally) aggravating the arbitrator, Bob concluded he now had no practical choice. He had to go to court to seek to disqualify the arbitrator.
By Rhys Dipshan | April 16, 2018
Federal courts are split on whether computer fraud provisions in cyberinsurance policies cover the actions of employees tricked into sending funds to cybercriminals. The Ninth Circuit is among the courts that have ruled that computer fraud policies don't cover those situations.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By NJLJ Contributors | April 16, 2018
The latest insights in hi-tech litigation: covering crypto-currencies, cyberattacks, technology assisted review, spoliation of electronic evidence and more.
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