New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Thomas E. L. Dewey | April 12, 2024
In 2010, the former owners of the Peter Cooper Village and Stuyvesant Town property defaulted on their mortgage. Five years later, that property was sold at a profit that paid off outstanding principal and interest. Litigation then ensued over the allocation and distribution of certain excess proceeds from the sale.
By Greg Andrews | April 12, 2024
Super-charged antitrust enforcement from the DOJ and FTC is frustrating tech leaders, fraying their support for the president.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Justin Henry | April 12, 2024
A $40 million agreement between Quinn Emanuel and Longford Capital illustrates how law firms are seeking to make third-party finance more appealing to their clients.
By Isha Marathe | April 11, 2024
As deepfakes and AI-generated misinformation proliferates ahead of elections in over 60 countries, attorneys said most governments don't have many regulations up their sleeves to cope.
By Cassandre Coyer | April 11, 2024
Data scraping does not quite look like a data breach. But in cases of "mass web scraping," the amount of users' data leaked may trigger breach reporting notification obligations in some jurisdictions.
The Legal Intelligencer | Analysis|News
By Amanda O'Brien | April 11, 2024
In the last week, attorneys left Fox Rothschild and Swartz Campbell for plaintiffs firms, and at least two others have made similar moves since the start of 2024.
By Dan Roe | April 11, 2024
Another year of strong rate increases for Big Law means continued pressure on practices that can't sustain firmwide increases—and opportunities for midsize firms with greater flexibility.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Samuel Estreicher | April 11, 2024
Section 1595(a) of the TVPRA provides a civil remedy against perpetrators and anyone who "knowingly benefits, financially or by receiving anything of value from participation in a venture which that person knew or should have known has engaged in an act in violation." The use of a "knowingly benefits" standard of liability is fairly novel and raises some important questions.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Karen Hoffman Lent and Kenneth Schwartz | April 11, 2024
The FTC and DOJ are geared up to investigate and challenge serial acquisitions or roll-ups by private equtity firms. Many of these transactions have flown "under the radar" because they were below the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act's reporting threshold.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Justin Henry | April 10, 2024
"Starting with the pandemic years we saw high levels of attrition, and we're starting to see those attrition levels start to revert to what we saw pre-pandemic," said Jennifer Mandery, vice president for research at the NALP Foundation.
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