By Thomas G. Rohback and Brooke Oppenheimer | August 28, 2017
Thomas G. Rohback and Brooke Oppenheimer write: The recent cyber-attack on HBO should be a wakeup call to both businesses and insurers. While the amount sought by the hackers called "Mr. Smith"—roughly $6 million in bitcoin—is not a huge amount for HBO, it is significantly more than the amounts that have typically been demanded in recent cyber extortion demands.
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | August 22, 2017
Insurer Granted Entry of Default Judgment Against Defendants in Subrogation Action
By Josefa Velasquez | August 22, 2017
MVP Health Plan Inc. and MVP Health Insurance Co. agreed to pay a $200,000 fine and to correct claims processing procedures, and to make $9,000 in restitution to 356 members.
By Shibani Gokhale | August 18, 2017
John Nevius, who was also a shareholder in Anderson Kill's insurance recovery group, was committed to education and was a popular teacher and mentor at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University, his firm colleagues said.
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | August 17, 2017
Insurer Need Not Pay Lawsuit Defense Costs Incurred Prior to March 13, 2015, Notice
By Meghan Tribe | August 17, 2017
Four decades after taking the court at what would eventually become the U.S. Open Tennis Championships, a longtime in-house lawyer at American International Group Inc. is headed to DLA Piper in New York, although he won't be in attendance for the first serve festivities that start in the city later this month.
By Josefa Velasquez | August 17, 2017
According to a letter sent to health insurers Wednesday, it had "come to the attention" of the Department of Financial Services that some insurers may be denying claims of transgender individuals "because the gender with which the individual identifies does not match the gender of someone to whom those services are typically provided."
By Meghan Tribe | August 14, 2017
Nelson Canter, who 14 years ago walked away from his post as an office managing partner at Clausen Miller to start his own firm, is now taking that practice to McLaughlin & Stern. In October, the former town justice in Westchester County, New York, will become head of his new firm's insurance subrogation practice.
By David M. Barshay | August 9, 2017
In his No-Fault Insurance Law Wrap-Up, David M. Barshay discusses what qualifies as "timely written notice" of an accident beyond a No-Fault Application N-F 2 form, and the continuing hot topic of the examination under oath/independent medical exam no-show defense.
By Richard Raysman and Peter Brown | August 7, 2017
In their Privacy Matters column, Richard Raysman and Peter Brown write: Courts have begun to encounter a growing number of disputes over cyber insurance coverage, mostly relating to the scope of coverage, not to its existence. One recent example is the Southern District of New York's decision in 'Medidata Solutions v. Federal Insurance Co.'
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