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Jury Awards $6.1M to Former UC Riverside Faculty in Whistleblower Retaliation Verdict
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.Arguing Class Actions: In Defense of Defendant Class Actions
Arguing Class Actions is a monthly column by Adam J. Levitt for the National Law Journal.SEC Moves to Quash Coinbase Subpoena for Internal Crypto Records
"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.Supreme Court Remands 1st Amendment Challenges to Texas and Florida Social Media Laws
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.Integrating Generative AI into a Lawyer's Workflow
Legal AI — Gen AI tools trained for the legal profession — is transforming the practice of law right now, enabling lawyers at firms who are adopting these tools to draft legal documents faster than everView more book results for the query "*"
The Tough Part About the Transition to the Bench … and Then to the Appellate Bench
Speaking at the federal courthouse in Seattle last week, Ninth Circuit Chief Judge Mary Murguia and her colleagues Consuelo Callahan and Kim McLane discussed their career paths and the biggest challenge about taking on trial and appellate court roles.Workers Have New Incentives to Snitch to Feds, Skipping Internal Ethics Hotlines
"Could there be certain employees who choose not to report internally because they have a prospect of a whistleblower award at DOJ--yes," said Steve Fagell, a Covington & Burling partner.Ex-L.A. City Attorney Mike Feuer Testifies He Had No Knowledge of Litigation Collusion
Testifying at the State Bar Court trial of private attorney Michael Libman, Feuer said he didn't know until years later that lawyers working for his city attorney's office crafted a lawsuit meant only to serve as a favorable settlement vehicle.'A Hard Pill to Swallow': What's Next for NFL After $4.7 Billion 'Sunday Ticket' Verdict
A Los Angeles jury ordered the NFL on Thursday to pay $4.7 billion in damages to residential subscribers and $96 million to businesses. Federal antitrust law could treble the damages to more than $14 billion.Trending Stories
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