By Dan Clark | May 16, 2018
Albright gave his take on how legal departments should go about purchasing AI and whether or not it's going to replace human lawyers.
By Sue Reisinger | May 15, 2018
The enforcement decline is part of a downward trend that began in the last half of fiscal year 2017.
By Caroline Spiezio | May 1, 2018
A former AIG legal ops director and two current leaders at GSK weighed in on why legal departments might want to take reverse auctions into consideration, if they aren't already using this tactic.
By Kristen Rasmussen | April 10, 2018
A group of orthopedic and anesthesia providers in Newnan, Georgia, has agreed to pay $3.2 million to the United States to settle civil allegations that they engaged in an unlawful kickback scheme, federal prosecutors in Atlanta announced.
By MP McQueen | April 10, 2018
Federal agencies recovered more than $2.6 billion in health care fraud and abuse judgments, settlements and impositions in 2017, according to a new annual report from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the U.S. Department of Justice.
By Kristen Rasmussen | April 3, 2018
Many states and municipalities' efforts to update workplace policies and extend rights beyond the federal Family and Medical Leave Act are presenting difficulties for employers, particularly large ones that operate in numerous states.
By Kimberly E. Diamond and Paul M. Gelb | March 23, 2018
Despite the lack of bright-line procedures, there are five risk reduction measures a company may consider implementing to reduce its potential exposure to cyber breaches, strengthen its security protocols, and have some degree of protection in place in the event a lawsuit for a cybersecurity breach ensues.
By Ross Todd | February 22, 2018
The California Supreme Court on Wednesday indicated that it had granted a petition to review in "Traveler's Property Casualty Company of America v. Actavis."
By Kristen Rasmussen | February 7, 2018
Aetna has sued Kurtzman Carson Consultants, blaming the claims administrator for mailings that disclosed the name and condition of thousands of HIV patients. KCC responded by filing a suit of its own against Aetna, saying that the health insurance giant and its outside legal counsel, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, were responsible.
By Kristen Rasmussen | December 20, 2017
The Trump administration, House Republicans and a coalition of Democratic state attorneys general have settled their lawsuit over the legality of insurer subsidies under the Affordable Care Act. The settlement states that the parties agree that a trial judge's ruling that the House had standing to challenge the payments remains but does not “control” decisions in future litigation over this issue, clearing the way for the states' separate lawsuit.
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