By Maydeen Merino | November 15, 2023
"The investing public benefits from the Division of Enforcement's work as a cop on the beat," SEC Chair Gary Gensler said.
By Chris O'Malley | October 24, 2023
The agency unleashed a $10 million civil fine in one recent case, and went after a private company for the first time in another.
By Maydeen Merino | August 9, 2023
The agency's attention shifts from hospitals to telehealth as Congress seeks to aid in false claims enforcement.
By Charles Toutant | March 17, 2023
"Despite having knowledge of these allegations, no government agency has ever taken any adverse action against New York Waterway. That, as much as anything, establishes that the allegations lack merit," said New York Waterway lawyer Jennifer Mara.
The American Lawyer | Analysis
By Dan Roe | December 14, 2022
The congressional investigation into sexual misconduct and bullying at the NFL team reveals the firm as the latest in Big Law to hire third parties whose conduct would be considered unethical. But experts said current rules don't block the behavior.
By Marcia Coyle | August 22, 2022
The case in question is a qui tam action brought against corporations associated with the grocery and pharmacy chain SuperValu.
By Colleen Murphy | August 4, 2022
The New Jersey Appellate Division weighed whether the state "Whistleblower Act" applies to an employee complaint for wrongful termination brought against Bioreference Laboratories Inc. in retaliation for objections over lab operations in Houston, Texas.
By Charles Toutant | September 22, 2021
The settlement and fee award represent a rare victory for McOmber, McOmber & Luber, the firm representing Margaret Gathman, in the unforgiving terrain of False Claims Act litigation. The firm's Charles Kocher and Matthew Luber handled the case for Gathman.
By Charles Toutant | September 20, 2021
When McGowan said he could not close a deal to sell a system for detecting unemployment insurance fraud because the company had no such product, the company CEO told him to "sell them something," the suit claims.
By Suzette Parmley | May 13, 2021
The New Jersey Supreme Court issued a split decision on Wednesday as to whether Cape May County retaliated against its former purchasing agent after she became embroiled in the bidding process for the county's outside counsel business involving two law firms. In "Allen v. Cape May County," the 5-2 majority ruled that plaintiff Allen is covered under the Conscientious Employee Protection Act in her involvement with the request for proposal bid involving Capehart & Scatchard, though not with a similar engagement involving Ballard Spahr.
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