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Crowell Builds in Chicago, Luring Neal Gerber Corporate and Securities Leaders
The firm is now adding a large corporate practice in Chicago after its 2021 merger with an IP boutique in the city.The Dos and Don'ts of New York's New Social Media Law: What Employers Need to Know
On March 12, New York joined over 25 other states in protecting the privacy of its citizens with a new law that restricts employers from accessing…A New York City Ethics Committee Embraces Litigation Funding
The City Bar's recommendation is significant because it represents yet another high-profile body rejecting the U.S Chamber of Commerce's arguments regarding litigation funding, a guest columnist writes for the Law Journal.Judicial Ethics Opinion 23-103
(1) A town justice may not grant permission to the town court clerks to use the town court's courtroom to film for-profit training videos. (2) Whether some other person or entity may grant such permission raises legal and administrative questions we cannot answer.View more book results for the query "*"
Disciplinary Ruling Exposes Flaw in IOLTA Rules
That a lawyer can keep more than $225,000 in unclaimed money in his or her IOLTA account indefinitely is insane. But the current rules in Connecticut allow it.'Not Forthright' or 'A Dreamer'? Dueling Images of Joe Dunn Emerge as Bar Court Trial Nears Close
UC Berkeley School of Law Dean Erwin Chemerinsky called Dunn a man of "impeccable" integrity, even as former state bar trustees suggested the former bar executive was less than truthful about his 2014 trip to Mongolia.Paraquat Judge Tosses Key Plaintiffs' Expert Over 'Methodological Contortions'
U.S. District Judge Nancy Rosenstengel, who is overseeing the paraquat multidistrict litigation, found that Dr. Martin Wells, a biostatistician and epidemiologist at Cornell University, used unreliable methodologies in concluding that exposure to the pesticide increased the risks of getting Parkinson's disease.Lawmakers Seek National Privacy Statute and Protections for Children's Data
In the absence of a federal statute, many states have implemented their own data privacy laws, prompting Rep. Debbie Lesko, R-Arizona, to cite concerns that a federal law would need strong preemption language.Download Now
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