NEXT

National Law Journal

Judge Unseals Decision Disqualifying Sidley's James Cole From Huawei Defense

"The decision to disqualify an attorney in a criminal case is not made lightly," U.S. District Judge Ann Donnelly said in a ruling unsealed Tuesday in the Eastern District of New York.
5 minute read

The American Lawyer

Deal Watch: In the Home Stretch for Sprint and T-Mobile

Now that a key court ruling and reworked deal terms have the mega-deal back on track, here's a look back at some of the key players and how they worked together.
8 minute read

The Recorder

5 Takeaways From Qualcomm's 9th Circuit Antitrust Appeal

Things did not go so well for the Federal Trade Commission, or the Department of Justice for that matter, at a hearing before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
4 minute read

Law.com

Kirkland Pilots Motorola Solutions to $764M IP Verdict

The company had brought trade secret and copyright claims against a Chinese-based competitor, accusing former Motorola employees of taking proprietary source code for the operation of digital mobile radios.
2 minute read

Corporate Counsel

Huawei Chief Legal Officer Faces New Legal Challenge

The U.S. government announced new criminal charges against Huawei days after the Chinese telecom giant's chief legal officer, Song Liuping, accused rival Verizon Communications Inc. of patent infringement.
3 minute read

New York Law Journal

Standing in TCPA Cases: How Many Texts Are Enough?

After the Second Circuit's decision in 'Melito' (involving multiple text messages), the Eleventh Circuit issued a decision on standing under the TCPA in a case involving a single text message. In that case, 'Salcedo v. Hanna', the Eleventh Circuit ruled that a single text message did not afford standing to the plaintiff. In her Internet Issues/Social Media column, Shari Claire Lewis discusses the decision, concluding that at least one thing is clear: The issue of standing in text-related TCPA cases remains in flux.
9 minute read

The Recorder

Ninth Circuit Sounds Ready to Trash Qualcomm Antitrust Ruling

Over an hourlong hearing, three judges hammered the Federal Trade Commission over its antitrust theory while suggesting Qualcomm shouldn't be penalized for succeeding.
5 minute read

The Recorder

High Court Orders Apple to Pay Workers for Time Spent Searching Their Bags

Thursday's ruling by the California Supreme Court comes more than two years after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit sought clarification in a class action brought by Apple store workers in California who sought pay for time spent during searches of their bags before leaving work.
6 minute read

New York Law Journal

Reasonable Search, Liability for Unauthorized Broadcast, Fraud Complaint Dismissed

In their Eastern District Roundup, Harvey M. Stone and Richard H. Dolan report on several significant decisions: one holding that officers had reasonable suspicion to stop and search defendant; another finding liability and assessing damages against a lounge for broadcasting a boxing match without authorization; and a third dismissing a complaint alleging securities fraud.
8 minute read

International Edition

Clifford Chance and Latham and Watkins Advise On Major German Broadband Deal

The deal could lead to the creation of a new European telecommunications offering.
2 minute read

Resources

  • International Export and Trade Assistance State Law Survey

    Brought to you by LexisNexis®

    Download Now

  • How This Personal Injury Firm Reduced Client Intake Time by 80%

    Brought to you by PracticePanther

    Download Now

  • The Hidden Cost of Bad Reviews: Why Law Firms & Attorneys Can't Afford a Damaged Online Reputation

    Brought to you by Erase.com

    Download Now

  • Leveraging Technology to Improve Employee Engagement and Client Satisfaction

    Brought to you by CARET Legal

    Download Now