By Caroline Spiezio | September 4, 2018
Jason Lavender had been GC at JonesTrading Institutional Services for less than five months before his recent firing.
By Tom McParland | August 31, 2018
U.S. District Judge Richard G. Andrews of the District of Delaware denied post-trial motions for acquittal and a new trial for David R. Gibson, Robert V.A. Harra, William B. North and Kevyn N. Rakowski—convicted in May on 15 counts of fraud and conspiracy.
New York Law Journal | In Brief
By Christine Simmons | July 26, 2018
Delaware lawyer John Shasanmi, formerly of Pepper Hamilton and Dewey & LeBoeuf, denies accusations that he stole $600,000 from a Harlem church he represented in a real estate transaction.
By Tom McParland | June 20, 2018
A bill to amend the Delaware Constitution and end the state's reliance on cash bail died in the Senate late Wednesday, bringing to a halt a yearslong reform effort that had brought together police, corrections officers and the judiciary.
By Tom McParland | June 15, 2018
Lawmakers in Dover are considering a legislative package to amend the Delaware Constitution and end the state's reliance on cash bail, as a looming end-of-session deadline threatens to delay the reforms.
By Max Mitchell | May 29, 2018
A Delaware lawyer has received a lengthy prison sentence for his role in a payday lending scheme that involved lying about his client's connections with Native American tribes in order to dupe customers into paying interest rates far above the legal limit.
By Tom McParland | May 3, 2018
A federal jury on Thursday found four former Wilmington Trust executives guilty of orchestrating a scheme to hide hundreds of millions of dollars in bad loans from regulators and investors.
By Tom McParland | April 20, 2018
Legal aid groups are touting a new study that shows a more than 700 percent return on investment for the three nonprofit agencies that provide legal services to Delaware's poor, as leaders seek to restore state funding that was slashed from last year's budget.
By Andrew Denney | March 27, 2018
Hearing an appeal by a former Goldman Sachs computer engineer convicted of stealing code from the bank, New York Court of Appeals judges Tuesday questioned defendant Sergey Aleynikov's assertion that he did not make a tangible copy of the code because he had saved it on a hard drive.
By Tom McParland | March 26, 2018
Democrats in the Delaware General Assembly last week unveiled controversial legislation to ban the sale of assault-style weapons, after a similar measure in Maryland withstood a constitutional challenge from gun-rights advocates in 2017.
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