By Amanda Bronstad | June 3, 2021
The lawsuits, which allege that the apps, available on the Google Play Store, constitute unlawful gambling because they operate like slots, poker, blackjack and bingo, have been sent to U.S. District Judge Edward Davila, who is overseeing similar lawsuits against Apple.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Harvey M. Stone and Richard H. Dolan | May 13, 2021
In this edition of their Eastern District Roundup, Harvey M. Stone and Richard H. Dolan discuss a decision precluding defendants from calling plaintiff's former counsel as a trial witness; a holding that a complaint alleging illegal robocalls in violation of the TCPA did not adequately connect defendants to the calls received by plaintiff; and a decision declining to dismiss securities fraud claims, rejected defendants' arguments based on the statute of limitations and risk disclosures.
By Lizzy McLellan | May 3, 2021
Dechert, Jones Day, Wilmer, Gibson Dunn, Hogan Lovells and Arent Fox all added prominent D.C. lawyers in recent days, some of whom have chosen a new firm in their return to Big Law.
By Charles Toutant | April 16, 2021
"The nature of and deterioration of the attorney/client relationship, exhibited throughout the hearing, justified Mr. Stone's good-faith belief that the representation could not ethically be continued," Judge Thomas Vena ruled.
By Michael A. Mora | April 8, 2021
Attorney David Ferleger is planning to appeal the Eleventh Circuit ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court due to a conflicting ruling with a separate federal appellate court.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By H. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal | April 5, 2021
As text and app messaging and online communication platforms such as Slack continue to supplement—and supplant—email communications in the workplace, parties and courts need to consider these technologies' impact on document preservation and production obligations. A recent decision provides clues on how courts may treat such electronically stored information. Christopher Boehning and Daniel J. Toal discuss the case in this edition of their Federal E-Discovery column.
By Phillip Bantz | April 1, 2021
A majority of in-house leaders say their companies have surveyed employees to gauge their willingness to transition back to the office. The results are, predictably, mixed.
By Marcia Coyle | April 1, 2021
"Appellate judges spend virtually every working hour speaking, listening to, reading, or writing English prose. Statutes are written in English prose, and interpretation is not a technical exercise to be carried out by mechanically applying a set of arcane rules," Alito wrote in a concurrence in the case Facebook Inc. v. Duguid, which confronted the Telephone Consumer Protection Act.
By Phillip Bantz | March 23, 2021
"How many in the community, myself included, have had to have difficult conversations with our parents, about their safety and strategies, to make sure they're as safe as possible?" said Lynn Whitcher, GC at San Diego-based tech and telecom firm MD7.
By Mike Scarcella | March 12, 2021
The case was one of two in D.C. court in which the firm in 2020 sought fees from a client.
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