By Tom McParland | December 3, 2018
Tenth Circuit administrator Jill Langley will fill the position created in the wake of widely publicized sexual harassment allegations against former Ninth Circuit Judge Alex Kozinski.
By Charles Toutant | November 13, 2018
Paul Matey, up for a New Jersey seat on the Third Circuit, got a hearing Tuesday from the Senate Judiciary Committee even though both New Jersey senators have withheld their "blue slips" for his nomination.
By Ryan Lovelace | November 2, 2018
In the final months of his tenure at Facebook, Colin Stretch told lawyers at an ABA panel in Washington that his company recognizes "transparency" as a key to earning the trust of users and policymakers.
By Tom McParland | September 11, 2018
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has begun its search for two temporary bankruptcy judges in Delaware, nearly 10 months after Congress passed legislation to provide reinforcement for one of the busiest bankruptcy courts in the nation.
By Erin Mulvaney | August 28, 2018
Management-side lawyers were waiting and watching for new guidance from the U.S. Labor Department on compensation practices. One lawyer said the new directive is more a "technical revision" of Obama-era policies.
By Scott Graham | August 15, 2018
David Ruschke will become a senior adviser, giving PTO Director Andrei Iancu the opportunity to name his own chief of the Patent Trial and Appeal Board.
By Erin Mulvaney | August 15, 2018
Administrative law judges and federal appeals judges are now grappling with the scope of the Supreme Court's ruling in 'Lucia,' which confronted the lawfulness of the appointment of federal in-house judges.
By Tom McParland | August 10, 2018
The new judges step in as the court deals with an uptick in filings following the U.S. Supreme Court's TC Heartland decision.
By Tom McParland | July 6, 2018
Attorneys from Pepper Hamilton are aiding a Delaware author in his bid to force the FBI to release records of the agency's investigation into the theft of crown jewels belonging to the House of Hesse, a German royal family, by U.S. soldiers at the end of World War II.
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.
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