By Charles Toutant | April 24, 2024
"I'm a defense lawyer primarily, but at the end of the day, noncompete agreements were not meant to be a tool to prevent your midlevel workers from going from Company A to Company B," employment attorney Michael Elkins said.
By Maria Dinzeo | March 29, 2024
The Department of Justice and Federal Trade Commission are worried that the growing use of algorithms is making price fixing increasingly difficult to detect—and that the use of AI to create ever-more-sophisticated algorithms will exacerbate that challenge.
By Maydeen Merino | February 20, 2024
"Anytime you get a substance that is widely used and is showing up all over the place in the environment, now suddenly brought under the very serious liability regime of CERCLA, you're going to see a lot of potential liability and litigation around that," said UCLA environmental law professor William Boyd.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Andrew Heck | January 31, 2024
In short, this legislation expands the scope of permissible business activities by certain manufacturers, creates new license categories, ratchets up the pressure on inactive retail licenses to be put to productive use, and creates a new mechanism for bringing otherwise inactive retail licenses back into active use.
By Maydeen Merino | January 30, 2024
The agency says it will hold in-person and virtual sessions with affected workers and communities nationwide to identify existing barriers to reporting job discrimination.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Michael F. Schaff and Seth Tipton | January 26, 2024
The primary reason that ethical issues arise when an attorney is representing a client in the cannabis industry stems from the fact that cannabis remains federally illegal.
By The Law Journal Editorial Board | January 12, 2024
Many critics thought the system was archaic and inequitable and hindered competition with neighboring states.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Michael F. Schaff and Jennie M. Miller | December 21, 2023
For this December issue of our cannabis law column, we asked Christopher Riggs, chief counsel of the NJ-CRC, to respond to some questions that would (i) provide insight into the operations of the NJ-CRC, (ii) highlight the key developments in 2023, (iii) provide some helpful pointers to attorneys practicing in the cannabis field, and (vi) provide a preview of what is to come in 2024.
By Jimmy Hoover | December 20, 2023
The justices schedule February arguments on EPA's "Good Neighbor" initiative opposed by industry and Republican-led states.
By Maydeen Merino | December 20, 2023
"[T]he Commission will be vigilant in protecting the public from unfair biometric surveillance and unfair data security practices," said Samuel Levine, director of the FTC's consumer protection bureau. Rite Aid denied the allegations of wrongdoing.
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