By Charles Toutant | January 12, 2023
Impound suits by finance companies appear to be concentrated in the Northeast, but the phenomenon has reached as far as San Antonio, Texas.
By Lawrence A. Goldman and Wendy L. Hagen | January 12, 2023
It is important that all reporting companies and their counsel begin to identify the parties about whom a filing must be made and to collect the necessary information on an ongoing basis to timely make required filings under the CTA.
By Charles Toutant | January 6, 2023
The attorney "simply does not have any remaining credibility with this court, or likely almost any other court that he has litigated before in recent years," Senior U.S. District Judge Noel Hillman wrote.
By Charles Toutant | December 27, 2022
The plaintiff in "Rush" regarded the calls as "merely annoying," while Polhill contends that the calls caused her stress and headaches and she was once reprimanded by her supervisor after speaking with Navient, U.S. District Judge Karen Williams wrote.
By ALM Staff | December 13, 2022
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the document here.
By Colleen Murphy | October 17, 2022
The lawsuit, filed in Mercer County Superior Court, Chancery Division, alleged that Credit Suisse packaged billions of dollars of defective residential loans into publicly traded securities.
By Hugo Guzman | October 7, 2022
"While many in-house counsel are skilled negotiators by training, negotiation takes on a different tenor when you're sitting across from an external partner whose collaboration you rely on for critical support," legal department consultant Jason Winmill said.
By Charles Toutant | September 28, 2022
Redlining is getting more attention now after getting less attention during the previous administration, said Matthew Adams, a white-collar defense lawyer at Fox Rothschild who handles redlining cases. "I think it fits with the current administration's focus on civil rights abuses," Adams said.
By Charles Toutant | September 28, 2022
"Trade associations are less likely to pose a risk of quid pro quo corruption because their member banks have varying interests, whereas individual banks have uniform interests. What one member bank considers to be favorable legislation may be harmful to another member bank. It follows that the member banks are unlikely to seek a uniform quid pro quo from political actors," U.S. Third Circuit Judge Joseph Greenaway Jr. wrote.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael A. Mora | September 8, 2022
In an industry characterized by multibillion-dollar corporations, Parkway Dental Services LLC swung above its weight. But that all changed when the coronavirus pandemic hit. Now the New Jersey company has become part of a litigation trend after it turned to merchant cash advance companies.
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