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By Dara Kam | November 15, 2017
Throughout the nation, lawmakers are being forced to confront revelations about dirty little secrets once kept hidden behind the statehouse doors.
1 minute read
By C. Ryan Barber | November 13, 2017
For some lawyers working on Robert Mueller's special counsel team, life—that is, other cases—must go on. That was true Monday for U.S. Justice Department appellate lawyer Adam Jed, who took a break from his detail on Mueller's team to appear before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in a case without a Russia connection.
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By Celia Ampel | November 10, 2017
The lawsuit alleges Epic Systems Corp.'s software, used by four South Florida hospitals and hundreds more across the U.S., double-bills for anesthesia.
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By Marcia Coyle | November 6, 2017
One item on an otherwise routine U.S. Supreme Court orders list on Monday caught the eye of high court devotees and triggered questions across the Twitter-verse: “The motion of the solicitor general to argue pro hac vice is granted.” A pro hac vice request from the Office of Solicitor General? How could it be that a member of the government's top appellate team was not a member of the Supreme Court bar? Meet Christopher Michel, who recently joined the SG's Office.
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By Scott Flaherty | November 2, 2017
A superseding criminal complaint filed against Jeffrey Wertkin on Wednesday includes three new counts—two for obstruction of justice and a third for interstate transport of stolen goods.
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By Christine Simmons | October 30, 2017
An attorney who sued Kramer Levin; Akerman; Nixon Peabody; and other firms is promising to challenge the dismissal of his case, even while he reportedly remains under criminal investigation.
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By P.J. Dannunzio | October 27, 2017
A federal judge won't bar mention of allegations in a False Claims Act kickback case against a medical center that did not appear in a whistleblower's complaint.
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By C. Ryan Barber | October 26, 2017
Jane Norberg, the head of the SEC's whistleblower office, said the corporate world is getting the hint and not using severance agreements to stifle would-be tipsters. “The good news is that I have seen some improvement in this area,” Norberg said Thursday at a securities conference in Washington. The “message is out there” that severance agreements cannot include terms preventing employees from contacting regulators, she added.
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By Cogan Schneier | October 23, 2017
The firm Kasowitz Benson Torres brought the lawsuit under the False Claims Act against various chemical companies, including BASF and Dow Chemical, but a D.C. judge said the firm's legal theory failed.
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By Scott Flaherty | The American Lawyer | October 12, 2017
Reuben Guttman is seeking dismissal or summary judgment, saying the lawsuit merely rehashes old claims and is an attempt to sully his reputation.
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WittKieffer is proud to partner with Mom's Meals in the search for their Director of Legal Affairs. Mom's Meals is an investor-owned compan...