By Steven B. Saal | May 20, 2022
The amended statute clearly places the onus on defendants to proactively address insurance coverage matters. Defense counsel can no longer wait for plaintiffs to pursue the issue and respond as necessary.
By David L. Yohai, Heather Weaver and Sherry Safavi | May 20, 2022
The article examines the potential limitations of CBI coverage and the practical challenges of litigating CBI claims. It also discusses ways to draft stronger CBI policies and the growing popularity of other types of insurance in response to global supply chains that are increasingly reliant on just-in-time sourcing and that continue to be aggravated by recent disasters.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Anthony Rapa and Matthew J. Thomas | May 19, 2022
This article provides a snapshot of the U.S. measures currently in place.
By Michael Sevi and Joshua R. Schwartz | May 13, 2022
'Global Re' puts the focus of reinsurance dispute resolution where it belongs: the meaning of language as understood in the context of industry norms and practice.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael A. Sirignano | May 5, 2022
The governing law in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, including the need to plead representative examples of fraudulent claims, derives from the Second Circuit's decision in 'U.S. ex rel. Chorches v. American Medical Response'.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Julian D. Ehrlich | May 5, 2022
This discussion will examine how unfolding case law since 'Burlington' has delved ever deeper into the nature of causation and most recently led to a new body of law interpreting the effect of third-party pleadings on AI coverage.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jeffrey G. Steinberg | April 29, 2022
A discussion of insurance company litigation management guidelines, and some "over-the-top behavior by insurers warranting pushback."
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Ioana Good | April 25, 2022
As cyber breaches rise, communication planning evolves.
By Jane Wester | April 22, 2022
The three-judge panel said a Department of Health & Human Services rule aligned with plaintiffs' argument over who should pay for medications, but it did not apply retroactively, thus denying her relief.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By James Vinocur | April 21, 2022
While the White House and federal agencies such as the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency have recently stressed the risk of Russian attacks on critical infrastructure companies, it is the potential of collateral damage against much smaller downstream vendors and unrelated companies that remains high due to the potential for self-propagating malware.
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