0 results for 'Discover Financial Services'
Keep Your Credit Cards Close. Keep Your Employees Closer.
Imagine you have an employee that opens a credit card in your name for your business. Your employee then runs up tens of thousands of dollars of debt on the account and illegally accesses your bank accounts to partially pay off the monthly statements.Hurricane Season Is Here—Are You Ready for FEMA Funding?
When a hurricane or other natural disaster hits, public and private nonprofit entities often look to the Federal Emergency Management Association (FEMA) for financial assistance. But obtaining and keeping FEMA Public Assistance is not simple. With so many rules, regulations, and policies applicable to funding, applicants frequently find themselves fighting to justify eligibility of costs.Potential Legal Pitfalls for Public Companies Due to SEC's New Cybersecurity Rules
Some 16 months after first proposing rules for public companies and investment advisors, the SEC adopted new rules, chief among them that public companies disclose material cybersecurity breaches to investors within four days.New York Attorney General Files to Join Appeal by Debtor Who Says She Is Victim of 'Sewer Service'
According to the AG, sewer service, in which debt collectors fail to serve defendants yet claim they have done so in court affidavits, has become "disturbingly common" in consumer-credit cases in New York, which in recent years has contributed to a significant spike in default judgments against plaintiffs.Investor Sues Start-Up Pipeline Equity and Its CEO, Alleging Fraud
Investor Michael Kemper Claims Pipeline and Roy used his $100,000 see-money investment to boost Roy's personal brand instead of investing it to grow the company.View more book results for the query "Discover Financial Services"
Court of Appeals Considers Scope of Employer's Duty of Supervision Over Employee
In Moore Charitable Foundation v. PJT Partners, the Court of Appeals considered the scope of an employer's duty of supervision over its employee and whether a complaint sufficiently alleged that an employer was on notice of its employee's propensity to commit fraud before the employee caused injury to the plaintiff. IThreading the Needle: 10 Things Legal Needs to Know About Threads
For legal professionals, the rise of the new app Threads opens new avenues for engagement, networking, and information sharing, while also raising questions about privacy, data security, and the impact on legal professionals' online presence.Stroock Sees Partner Exits Amid Protracted Merger Talks
The chair of Stroock's litigation practice and the leader of its LA office are planning to leave for Steptoe & Johnson, while a real estate partner has landed at Jones Day.CLASS ACTION: Wells Fargo Accused of Discriminating Against Hispanics
Wells Fargo's alleged policy created a disparate impact for bilingual team members, causing significant financial hardship when in 2022 and beyond the mortgage industry was financially devastated by rising interest rates and other financial impacts, the complaint asserts.If You Think It 'Thinks,' Think Again
Three columnists analyze a recent, groundbreaking sanctions order from a Southern District of New York judge against an attorney who admitted to using fake citations generated by ChatGPT in a court filing.Trending Stories
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