By Chris O'Malley | September 11, 2023
The FTC last month forced drastic changes to a $5.2 billion energy deal by invoking the Clayton Act's prohibition on having a director of one company also serve as a director of a competitor.
By Maria Dinzeo | September 5, 2023
The company dismissed Robert Michael Herrman in early August, and Securities and Exchange Commission filings indicate it already has filled his post.
By Victoria Ostrander | August 31, 2023
We are pleased to unveil the finalists and honorees for The National Law Journal Legal Awards highlighting the top litigation and appellate work from the past year.
By Chris O'Malley | August 30, 2023
"These changes radically shift the legal landscape for companies," Morgan, Lewis & Bockius wrote in a note to corporate clients, and "make it much easier for unions to organize."
By Trudy Knockless | August 28, 2023
"It's a lot of work because there are a lot of them out there," corporate governance expert Charles Elson said. "And their connection to your company can be very, frankly, vague at best."
By Maria Dinzeo | August 16, 2023
"Taking over at a fraught organization is inherently a gamble. If things start terrible and improve to merely bad, people may not give you any credit," Andrew Verstein, a law professor at UCLA, said.
By Hugo Guzman | August 2, 2023
"Right now, unions are on a playing field that has never been more favorable for them, at least not in the last decade," Duane Morris partner Gerald Maatman said. "Now's the time to do it, while the going is good."
Corporate Counsel | Analysis|News
By Hugo Guzman | Greg Andrews | July 27, 2023
The "prevailing norm" in corporate America is "governance is lacking, resources are misaligned, and enterprises fly blind to their most critical cybersecurity risks, putting the company and shareholders on uncertain ground," said Scott Kannry, CEO of the cyber-risk engineering firm Axio.
By Maria Dinzeo | July 25, 2023
"I think it's going to lead to a great deal of litigation and will take a lot of time to clarify the standard," said Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of Berkeley Law.
By Chris O'Malley | July 20, 2023
President Biden for months has been blasting "junk fees." So the industry expected a proposal. But what came is "far more radical than anyone anticipated," Ballard Spahr wrote in a client advisory.
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