By Samuel P. Groner and R. David Gallo | November 13, 2019
In the wake of the 'Cyan' decision, the number of 1933 Act claims brought in state court has increased dramatically, with the most significant increase occurring in New York.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | October 2, 2019
"Go back to what we were talking about," U.S. District Judge Ellen Huvelle chided Klayman at one point.
By Donald F. McGahn II and Brett A. Shumate | September 24, 2019
Recent trends in how federal district courts exercise their power of judicial review underscore the changing nature of regulatory litigation.
By Jenna Greene | September 18, 2019
The 2016 suit against Michael Goguen, then a partner at storied venture capital firm Sequoia Capital, rocked Silicon Valley. On Wednesday, a judge issued terminating sanctions dismissing the complaint. What happened?
By Scott M. Himes | September 12, 2019
Keeping these "don'ts" in mind when taking a deposition will focus you on the "dos" for a successful deposition and, relatedly, a well-tried case in the courtroom.
By Ross Todd | September 10, 2019
The Jane Doe plaintiff's lawyer at Sanford Heisler Sharp called the subpoena for documents from her new employer "redolent of an improper purpose" and wrote that "a plaintiff does not expose her current job record to carte blanche scrutiny merely by filing suit against her prior employer."
By Amanda Bronstad | July 30, 2019
Three lead plaintiffs attorneys accused in a sanctions motion of disclosing sealed documents in lawsuits over Bair Hugger surgical blankets have brought their own motion for sanctions, claiming 3M's lawyers "resorted to fabricating facts."
By Jenna Greene | June 26, 2019
'The deposition appears to have been a colossal waste of time and resources,' the Delaware Supreme Court wrote in a 20-page addendum detailing the misconduct of Tony award-winning producer Carole Shorenstein Hays.
By Angela Morris | June 24, 2019
“The evidence of Pepper Hamilton's conduct in violation of the court's orders is so 'clear, direct, weighty and convincing' that the court reaches this conclusion with clear conviction and without hestitancy,” U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman of Waco wrote.
By Jenna Greene | June 19, 2019
Bridgeport Superior Court Judge Barbara Bellis on Tuesday said Jones' behavior was “indefensible," "unconscionable," and "possibly criminal."
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