National Law Journal | Conversation
By Andrew Banquer | February 14, 2022
A multiskilled project team of internal and external resources can build the backbone for self-help tools, automation and AI that streamline contracting and free attorneys to be the strategic business advisers internal clients need them to be.
By Bruce Love | January 26, 2022
Daniel Graham said he was drawn to McDermott because he sees it as the "premier health care and technology" firm.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | December 16, 2021
The dismissal means Trump still owes Daniels $44,100 for the lawsuit over her nondisclosure agreement, though Daniels also owes Trump nearly $300,000 for a separate defamation lawsuit.
By Tom McParland | November 16, 2021
The dispute centers in part on a now-infamous August 2018 tweet by Tesla CEO Elon Musk, saying that he had "funding secured" for taking his firm private at $420 per share.
By Allison Dunn | October 29, 2021
Judith Zimmerman, an assistant professor the psychiatry department at the University of Utah from 2005 to 2013, was granted $135,000 for emotional distress damages and $625,000 for the university's breach of contract before June 30, 2013, according to the verdict form.
By Jane Wester | September 22, 2021
The lawsuit was filed in Dutchess County Supreme Court, where a state Supreme Court justice in July 2020 refused to block publication of Mary Trump's book.
By Alaina Lancaster | September 15, 2021
A divided panel for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed in part a district court judgment finding Assembly Bill 51—which Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law in October 2019—was preempted by the Federal Arbitration Act.
By Andrew Maloney | June 8, 2021
Jenner & Block, which just hired the former chief judge of the U.S. Civilian Board of Contract Appeals, said the number of government contract matters the firm is handling has grown by about one-third since last year.
By Amanda Bronstad | February 9, 2021
One attorney has filed a motion before the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation to coordinate 42 class actions into multidistrict litigation in the Northern District of California. Robinhood is one of 35 defendants and their subsidiaries facing lawsuits over the Jan. 28 trading halt, according to court papers.
By Marcia Coyle | November 4, 2020
The Hogan Lovells partner agreed with Justice Brett Kavanaugh that religious beliefs deserved respect and that both rights were important, but that's where their shared views ended. The former Obama-era acting U.S. solicitor general said he "couldn't profoundly disagree more" with Kavanaugh's characterization of the city of Philadelphia "looking for a fight."
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