By Jenna Greene | May 23, 2019
The lawyers were criticized by name in a decision issued late Tuesday by U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh of the Northern District of California, who singled them out as the “architect, implementers, and enforcers of Qualcomm's licensing practices.”
By Kristen Rasmussen | May 16, 2019
A study released Thursday found that of the 10% of employment decisions resolved by a decision in arbitration and the 14% resolved by a decision in litigation, employees were 32% more likely to win in an arbitration proceeding, compared to 11% in court.
By Sue Reisinger | May 15, 2019
It's the first time at least since 2010 that 100% of the SEC's actions were brought before an administrative law judge, according to a new report from NYU and Cornerstone Research. By comparison, in 2010 only 32% were administrative rather than filed in court.
By Sue Reisinger | May 14, 2019
The Betty Dukes case still haunts Walmart's legal department, which is having to deal with the latest round of gender discrimination lawsuits filed by hundreds of women across a dozen states, according to the civil rights lawyer who's been behind the litigation since the beginning.
By Mike Scarcella and Nate Robson | May 3, 2019
"The notice of appeal filed today has no effect on the requirement that [employers] submit 2017 and 2018 EEO-1 Component 2 data by September 30, 2019," the Justice Department said in a court filing.
By Kristen Rasmussen | April 26, 2019
The Dearborn, Michigan-based company disclosed today that the U.S. Department of Justice has opened a criminal investigation into issues relating to Ford's analytical modeling and methods of testing a vehicle's resistance, though not devices such as the ones Volkswagen used to cheat on emissions tests.
By Dan Clark | April 16, 2019
The next wave of class action lawsuits will be the result of massive data breaches, according to the eighth annual Carlton Fields Class Action Survey, which is based on interviews with general counsel or senior legal officers at 395 Fortune 1000 companies in the U.S.
By Kristen Rasmussen | March 28, 2019
Boca Raton, Florida-based Office Depot Inc. and its subsidiary Support.com agreed to pay $25 million and $10 million, respectively, to settle allegations that they tricked customers into spending millions of dollars on repairs by deceptively claiming that they had found malware symptoms or infections on consumers' computers, an alleged scheme first flagged by store employees, the FTC said.
By Sue Reisinger | March 25, 2019
A former Duke University lab employee will receive nearly $34 million after the school Monday settled his False Claims Act lawsuit for $112.5 million alleging that another lab technician faked research data to obtain funding from federal agencies.
By Phillip Bantz | March 19, 2019
“You need to take regulatory compliance very seriously and when you do have problems don't cover it up. That will only turn it into intentional securities fraud and only makes the problem bigger,” said an attorney for the plaintiffs.
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