National Law Journal | Analysis
By Abigail Adcox | August 29, 2023
Visiting attorneys may go through a different vetting system than U.S.-educated associates, as some law firms recruit visiting lawyers from international law firms that they have existing relationships with.
By Dan Roe | July 7, 2023
A complaint filed this week alleges Wachtell added a $71 million success fee to accrued hourly billables, which lame-duck in-house counsel approved against Musk's orders.
By Alaina Lancaster | Zack Needles | June 20, 2023
In this week's episode, Law.com business of law reporter Justin Henry breaks down the twists and turns of the shake-up, including the leaked emails.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | June 8, 2023
The formal opinion issued on Wednesday details which intake tasks nonlawyers can handle, but also clarifies which questions from prospective clients must be answered by a lawyer.
The American Lawyer | Commentary
By Ross Todd | April 26, 2023
Politico reported yesterday U.S. Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch didn't disclose that Greenberg Traurig CEO Brian Duffy purchased a 40-acre Colorado property from an LLC where the justice was a minority owner.
By Dan Roe | April 12, 2023
A Q&A with Dan Nardello, CEO of a global investigations firm Nardello & Co., on the business and ethics of working for law firms on highly contentious matters.
The American Lawyer | Letter to the Editor
By Dan Nardello | March 7, 2023
Dan Nardello, CEO of investigations firm Nardello & Co., argues lawyers can't avoid ethical liability for the actions of the investigators they hire.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Justin Henry | February 22, 2023
The firms all signed onto an amicus brief opposing the regulator's effort to compel Covington & Burling to disclose confidential client information.
By Amanda Bronstad | February 9, 2023
"This case is an example of a wealthy client (Facebook) and its high-powered law firm (Gibson Dunn) using delay, misdirection, and frivolous arguments to make litigation unfairly difficult and expensive for their opponents," U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria ruled.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Justin Henry | January 13, 2023
Lawyers familiar with SEC litigation say this week's action is evidence of the commission taking a harder line on securities violations that result from cyber crime.
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