By Louis Lehot | July 2, 2024
Venture capital investors in Silicon Valley are taking notice. Try booking a flight from San Francisco to Singapore, Delhi, Mumbai, or Bangalore (to name but a few of the favorite Indian tech destinations), and you won't find many available seats that aren't already taken by U.S. opportunity seekers looking to check out the scene.
By Maria Dinzeo | July 2, 2024
Bret DiMarco, who departed laser maker Coherent two years ago after helping engineer its $7 billion sale, is taking the legal reins of a health tech giant with a stock market value of $37 billion.
By Samson Amore | July 2, 2024
"Realistically, we have a bunch of clients who want to deploy capital, and they've not been able to," said new hire Warren Biro. "Now, they want to get their money out the door, so they're being more flexible with pricing [and] terms."
By Cheryl Miller | July 1, 2024
Chief Justice Patricia Guerrero said the judicial branch is "committed to doing our part" to close California's $47 billion statewide budget deficit.
By Michelle Morgante | July 1, 2024
The suit filed by Jones Day contends researcher Norbert Peekhaus violated his employment agreement with Agensys Inc. by disclosing trade secrets stemming from his work at the company. Peekhaus later worked for the University of California Regents, who are represented by Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman.
By Cheryl Miller | July 1, 2024
Limits on solicitations to arbitrators faced opposition from arbitration companies and the business groups that use them.
By Kat Black | July 1, 2024
The suit, originally filed in November 2021, consolidated two separate whistleblower retaliation complaints brought by Dr. Jeannie Lochhead and Dr. Michele Nelson, both former faculty members at UC Riverside's Department of Psychiatry and Neuroscience. The case, which alleged that the UC Regents violated the California Whistleblower Protection Act, went to trial on May 17.
National Law Journal | Commentary
By Adam J. Levitt | July 1, 2024
Arguing Class Actions is a monthly column by Adam J. Levitt for the National Law Journal.
By Michael A. Mora | July 1, 2024
"Were this not the law, the private emails of all professors or others with experience purportedly related to their public duties thereafter would be subject to endless, intrusive discovery," Jorge Tenreiro of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission argued in the letter motion.
By Jimmy Hoover | July 1, 2024
In its decision, the high court sent internet industry challenges back to the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the Fifth and Eleventh circuits to examine whether the statutes' unconstitutional applications "substantially outweigh" the constitutional ones.
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