By Ross Todd | February 2, 2024
A team led by Greg Varallo and Jeroen van Kwawegen of Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann and David Tejtel of Friedman Oster & Tejtel secured a post-trial ruling from Delaware Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick finding that when it came to the Tesla CEO's pay package "Musk launched a self-driving process, recalibrating the speed and direction along the way as he saw fit."
Litigation Daily | Conversation
By Ross Todd | October 25, 2022
"You've got to jealously guard when you get the court involved in matters," says Bouchard, the former Chancellor of Delaware's Court of Chancery, now a partner at Paul Weiss.
By Ross Todd | September 30, 2021
Heidi Friedman and Renee Zaytsev of Thompson Hine, whose firm just surveyed 130-plus corporate leaders about their approach to environmental, social and governance matters, discuss whether the market's current focus ESG issues might spur litigation.
By Jenna Greene | May 28, 2020
"Forty inmates dying in the last few months at Parchman alone is neither outstanding nor innovative," Spiro said "And it's definitely nothing to be proud of."
By Jenna Greene | March 19, 2020
Delaware's general corporation law "allows immense freedom for businesses to adopt the most appropriate terms for the organization, finance, and governance of their enterprise," the state's high court held.
By Tom McParland | October 9, 2019
A familiar cast of characters, led by former Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz, is set to return to Wilmington Thursday afternoon for a contempt hearing in a bitter billing dispute with the custodian appointed to oversee TransPerfect's forced sale in 2015.
By Tom McParland | September 16, 2019
According to an amended complaint filed last week in Manhattan federal court, AT&T management overreported the number of customers who had signed up for the company's $35-per-month product, leading investors to believe it was well-positioned to compete with cheaper online streaming services such as Netflix and Hulu.
By Tom McParland | June 19, 2019
A unanimous panel of the high court said Tuesday that plaintiff Jack L. Marchand II had supported claims that two Blue Bell executives, and the company's board, had failed to implement any system to monitor the safety of the Texas-based company's product and its compliance with state and federal regulations.
By Tom McParland | June 3, 2019
Vice Chancellor Joseph R. Slights III on Friday said that the books-and-records lawsuit, filed last year by a New York-based pension fund, had produced at least "some evidence" that the company's board and senior management had knowingly placed users' information at risk and failed to comply with a 2011 consent decree mandating that better protect the data.
By Tom McParland | May 30, 2019
The lawsuit, filed in Delaware Chancery Court, came just weeks after Houston-based Occidental outbid Chevron Corp. for the right to buy Anadarko for $57 billion in a merger of two Texas oil-and-gas exploration giants.
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