By Tom McParland | September 24, 2019
Lawyers for the retired Harvard law professor also made a bid to have the matter dismissed, arguing that the plaintiffs' complaint was filed after the statute of limitations had run.
By Tom McParland | September 23, 2019
Dueling motions, set to be argued in the Southern District of New York, represent the latest front in a battle between the law professor, a former attorney for Jeffrey Epstein and a woman who has claimed she was recruited as a minor into the deceased financier's sex ring.
By Scott M. Himes | September 12, 2019
Keeping these "don'ts" in mind when taking a deposition will focus you on the "dos" for a successful deposition and, relatedly, a well-tried case in the courtroom.
By Tom McParland | August 23, 2019
U.S. Justice Department lawyers argue that last month's ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit was "fundamentally misconceived" because it conflated his private account with his role as a public officeholder.
By Amanda Bronstad | June 13, 2019
Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall moved to voluntarily dismiss his opioid lawsuit after a judge questioned whether he had federal jurisdiction over the case.
By Ross Todd | June 11, 2019
In particular, the court took issue with opposing counsel's use of email to warn of an impending default request, finding the medium "ill-suited for a communication on which a million dollar lawsuit may hinge."
By Shari L. Klevens and Alanna Clair | May 24, 2019
Prepare witnesses, properly and know the local rules on conferring with your client.
By Tony Mauro | May 20, 2019
At issue in the case was whether state-law failure-to-warn suits against Merck were preempted by federal law.
By Amanda Bronstad | May 2, 2019
At least three federal judges in multidistrict litigation have asked plaintiffs lawyers to disclose third-party litigation funding. “The minute you have an involvement of someone else," U.S. District Judge Paul Grimm, in the Marriott data breach cases, told Law.com, "you have the benefit of funding, but with that funding, there is a question about is there to be control or not.”
By Tom McParland | April 26, 2019
Vice Chancellor Morgan T. Zurn on Thursday allowed Otto Candies and other plaintiffs to file a new complaint despite their failure to comply with a court rule governing amended complaints in the case, which accuses KPMG of failing to detect a massive financial fraud by Citigroup Inc. and a KPMG client in Latin America.
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