By Jimmy Hoover | April 23, 2024
The Supreme Court appeared to lean toward vacating the Sixth Circuit's more relaxed standard for issuing such an injunction while re-affirming what Starbucks says is the traditional four-part test for such relief.
By Maydeen Merino | April 5, 2024
"[T]he Commission will continue vigorously defending the Final Rules' validity in court and looks forward to expeditious resolution of the litigation," the SEC said.
By Chris O'Malley | February 28, 2024
With the new independent contractor standard, the U.S. Department of Labor is "essentially putting their thumb on the scale to encourage a finding of employment," Baker & Hostetler partner Todd Lebowitz said.
By Maydeen Merino | January 16, 2024
Agency has failed to show that amendments to the consumer protection rule are needed, groups say.
By Chris O'Malley | January 2, 2024
Many of the new laws are state statutes, with provisions that differ from similar measures passed elsewhere. That reality will add to the compliance challenges for businesses with workers scattered across the country.
By Chris O'Malley | August 30, 2023
"These changes radically shift the legal landscape for companies," Morgan, Lewis & Bockius wrote in a note to corporate clients, and "make it much easier for unions to organize."
By Andrew Goudsward | September 28, 2021
The move reunites Dan Berkovitz with SEC Chair Gary Gensler.
By Scott Graham | June 17, 2021
The PTO kept sending mail to an incorrectly provided street address, even though it had an email, a telephone number and a unique customer identifier it could have cross-checked. Judge Leonie Brinkema ruled that it was likely arbitrary and capricious for the PTO to withdraw a patent application under those circumstances.
By Mike Scarcella | April 20, 2021
"I will be looking for evidence of mistake, inadvertence, surprise, excusable neglect, or other factors which might explain respondent's failure to respond to the orders issued in this case," an administrative law judge, Steven Bell, said in a recent order in a whistleblower case against Honeywell.
By Joseph G. Poluka and David J. Oberly | February 18, 2021
In-house attorneys and other executives are not immune from criminal liability and can be targeted for criminal prosecution for actions taken in connection with corporate matters.
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