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A Model, a Billionaire and a Verdict: Both Sides Claim Victory in Miami Feud
"Plaintiff's position that she won is a delusional one," said defense attorney Herman J. Russomanno III.Growing Exterritorial Expansion of RICO
Within months of the Supreme Court's decision in 'Yegiazaryan v. Smagin', a significant number of federal appellate courts applied the new precedent with impressive speed, thoroughness and consistency. In doing so, the Courts of Appeals have expanded the scope of RICO into terrain in which older decisions had not dared to tread.Action Over Unease: What Happens Post-Tender Acceptance?
The primary focus of most litigation in the United States is on the defendant's liability to the plaintiff. In the unique world of New York Labor Law claims, however, risk transfer issues among defendants and third-party defendants often become the main event.Meet the New Boss, Same as the Old Boss: The New Old Independent Contractor Rules
The U.S. Department of Labor's new independent contractor regulations, effective March 11, 2024, replace a previous set of regulations issued under the Trump administration in 2021; however, the new rule is not really new.SEC's Crackdown on AI Washing Has Broad Implications
The SEC has now announced that it has settled its first enforcement actions involving AI. Two investment advisors recently agreed to pay civil fines to the SEC for misstatements about AI technology. This signals a new era of SEC enforcement.View more book results for the query "*"
Client Guide to Judgment Enforcement
This article describes strategic considerations relating to collection that parties should weigh at the onset of any dispute, and tools that prevailing parties can later use to secure monetary awards. It then presents examples of prevailing parties weighing those considerations and employing those tools to receive what they are owed.Great Expectancies: Anticipating Inheritance
Given their druthers, parents generally prefer to treat children equally when it comes to passing on parental property upon death however situations may exist where transfers can be fair and equitable, even though not in equal amounts or shares.Federal Jurisdiction Over Petitions To Confirm, Vacate Arbitration Awards Uncertain After 'Badgerow'
The U.S. Supreme Court's decision in 'Badgerow v. Walters' has made it less predictable whether federal courts will find the amount-in-controversy requirement for diversity jurisdiction has been satisfied.No-Shop Provisions: Drafting Guidance from the Litigator's Perspective
This article provides insight, from a litigator's perspective, into how four key no-shop drafting decisions can impact the outcome of a litigation: duration, scope, choice of law and remedy.