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NEW YORK COUNTY Supreme Court Ira Salzman, Esq, for petitioner Phillip Marshall GoldFarb Abrandt Salzman & Kutzin Harvey E. Corn, Esq., for Anthony Marshal
Chancellor William Chandler III is known for decisions that gave broad deference to corporate boards, including the 2006 Disney decision and this year's Airgas ruling. Vice Chancellor Leo Strine appears to be the leading candidate to succeed him. Chandler hasn't yet identified the firm he'll join.
District Judge Gerard E. Lynch U.S. DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK For petitioner: Robert L. Sills and Jay K. Musoff, Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP
District Judge Denise Cote U.S. DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK Appearances: For Plaintiffs: John P. Coffey Steven B. Singer/
Changing a Judge's Mind on Qualcomm Sanctions
Going Public: Kevin Leung, left, Christian Mammen and four other lawyers felt a weight lift from their shoulders last week. Plus: Four of the six talk about the whole experience on this video.After a hostile reception by the Justices at oral arguments, plaintiffs lawyers doubted the high court would endorse U.S. securities claims by foreign investors who bought shares of foreign companies on foreign exchanges. They just prayed the damage would be limited. Those hopes were dashed by the Court's unanimous ruling Thursday. We've got analysis from the lawyers who argued both sides at the Court.
District Judge Denny Chin U.S. DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK Appearances: For Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation et al.: Arnold &a
Rogers & Wells Adopting British Pay System
When London-based Clifford Chance recruited its first U.S.-qualified lawyer in New York just seven years ago, senior partner Keith Clark, to ease suspicion, called his counterparts at top Manhattan firms to tell them his firm would do no more hiring here and had no intentions of developing a comprehensive U.S. practice. It is a different story now. Not only has Clifford Chance become an international legal behemoth, it will start compensating U.S. partners British style, in a modified lockstep system.Businesses Win End to Multiple Apartheid Suits
A federal judge in New York has dismissed a series of cases in which plaintiffs sought to recover billions of dollars from a host of companies who did business with the regime in South Africa during the days of apartheid. The judge found there was no jurisdiction to entertain the cases -- which were brought under the Alien Tort Claims Act against companies including IBM -- because there had been no showing that the companies violated international law.State AI Legislation Is on the Move in 2024
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