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Law Firms Are Relying More on Staff—and Treating Them More Like Lawyers
Professional staff are gaining responsibilities and returning value to their firms, and firms are responding by extending benefits once reserved for attorneys.Developer Ugo Colombo Files Defamation Lawsuit in Dispute With Craig Robins
The pioneering Miami luxury high-rise developer cited a state attorney's closeout memo to support his defamation claim.Wife Attempts to Recover Insurance Proceeds for Husbands Arson
Husband burns home, wife seeks insurance proceeds, court says no way.Will Regulation A Take Off? Expansion Makes Exchange Act Reporting Companies Eligible
In May 2015, we discussed the Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) amendments to Regulation A promulgated under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the Securities Act), informally referred to as Regulation A+ (see “Amendments to Regulation A: Expanding Access to Capital,” The Legal Intelligencer, May 5, 2015).The Plain Meaning of the Policy Reigns
Two types of theft are determined to be one "series of acts" by the U.S. Dist Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.View more book results for the query "*"
$2M Settlement Reached Between Stabbing Victim and Broward Condo Operators
Coral Gables attorney Todd Michaels represented Patricia Norris in her suit against the Palm Aire Gardens Condominium Association and property management company First Service Residential Florida. Despite allegedly receiving complaints about a resident harassing and stalking women in Palm Aire Gardens, the community's homeowners association took no action against the man who stabbed Norris 12 times, according to the complaint.Climate Change-Related Losses and Other Event-Driven Litigation Risks
In their Corporate Insurance Law column, Howard B. Epstein and Theodore A. Keyes discuss how climate change-related events such as hurricanes, earthquakes and wildfires can lead to related securities litigation, creating additional risk for corporations, directors and officers and their D&O insurers.Text Message, Stopped Midsentence, Helps Clinch $235,000 Settlement
The insurance carrier for a woman who was texting her husband about dinner while driving has settled a lawsuit for $235,000. While texting, Dasantila Rook's vehicle crossed the yellow line and struck a vehicle driven by Kelsey Lisk.