0 results for 'Milbank Tweed Hadley McCloy LLP'
Milbank Hires Former Allen & Overy U.S. Chief in New York Office
Months after Allen & Overy hired a group of leveraged finance partners in what it billed as a major New York expansion, a trio of real estate partners, including the firm's former U.S. practice leader, have left the Manhattan office for Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy.Firm Leaders: We Must Safeguard the Rule of Law
The nation's elite lawyers and the ABA must become more vocal about protecting the core values of the profession, some leaders say.Milbank's Unique Harvard-Run Client Training Program Catching On
Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy is taking its business development to the next level by offering clients extensive, in-depth business and leadership training at Harvard University—for free.Milbank's Unique Harvard-Run Client Training Program Catching On
Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy is taking its business development to the next level by offering clients extensive, in-depth business and leadership training at Harvard University—for free.Real Estate Report: Big Law Gets Smaller
Bye bye, corner office. Firms are cutting building footprints to reduce real estate costs, and dramatically redesigning space to appeal to millennials.N.Y. Firms Gamble on New Designs, New Buildings
Law firm offices in New York are getting smaller, but a renter's market is helping to spur lots of activity and ambitious designs.Goodwin Procter Loses Another Hong Kong Partner
U.K. firm Addleshaw Goddard has hired a Hong Kong partner from Goodwin Procter.Latham Opens Office in South Korea--Updated
Project finance partner Joseph Bevash will lead the Seoul office as managing partner, with partner Sungjin Kang and counsel Helena Kim both relocating from Hong Kong.SEC Whistleblower, Rejecting Award, Cites Revolving Door for Lax Enforcement
Former Deutsche Bank risk officer Eric Ben-Artzi grabbed headlines this year when he said he was rejecting a multimillion-dollar SEC whistleblower award. In refusing any compensation, Ben-Artzi put a spotlight on the revolving door at the agency: "So why did the SEC not go after Deutsche's executives? The most obvious concern is that Deutsche's top lawyers 'revolved' in and out of the SEC before, during and after the illegal activity at the bank," he said. Last week, U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Massachusetts, long a critic of SEC Chair Mary Jo White's leadership, raised new concerns in a letter to President Obama.Trump's Tax Returns—From Russia With Love?
Everyone assumed that Trump refused to release his tax returns because he paid little or no federal income tax. That could be the best-case scenario, writes columnist Steven Harper.State AI Legislation Is on the Move in 2024
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