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The 'Rogue Employee' and Dogs That Eat Homework
Have you ever noticed, when companies become the focus of a compliance scandal, that one of the first instincts of the company spokesperson is to blame the bad act on the proverbial "rogue employee"?Cuba tries to drag shadow economy into the light
A slew of economic changes introduced over the past year by President Raul Castro, including the right to work for oneself in 178 approved jobs, has been billed as a wide new opening for entrepreneurship in Cuba.Cost Effective, Plane and Simple
Firms can opt out of the high expense and hassle of traditional commercial air transportation in favor of a better option: private aircraft flight operations.The Pros and Cons of In-Flight Wi-Fi
There are two kinds of attorneys on airplanes: those who view their time in the sky as a respite from communications and those who have memorized the entire list of approved electronic devices. For both camps, in-flight Internet has largely been a disappointment.Jordan's Sovereign-Immunity Claim Doesn't Fly in 5th Circuit
The Kingdom of Jordan lost another round in its ongoing effort to end a dispute over the ownership of an airplane grounded in Texas. Jordan says the sequestration of the plane violates its immunity as a foreign sovereign, but the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals says the federal district court lacks jurisdiction in the case. The decision raises the issue of what role federal courts play in disputes involving foreign countries.Former High-Flier Pan Am Looks to Clip Its Old Firm Sheppard Mullin
The re-reincarnation of the airline Pan American is suing Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton and one of the firm's D.C. attorneys for legal malpractice claiming the firm represented Pan Am's general counsel without the company's knowledge.Tallying the Big Pro-CISPA Corporate Contributions
As the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA) moves through the legislative process, pro-CISPA corporate interests are outspending opponents of the bill "by orders of magnitude."A View to a Kill: Lost GE/Honeywell Deal Exposes Trans-Atlantic Conflict
The scuttling of General Electric's $42 billion acquisition of Honeywell by the European Commission put antitrust review of trans-Atlantic mergers center stage and highlighted differences in doctrine between U.S. and European regulators. In this article, William J. Kolasky and Leon B. Greenfield, who represented the companies in the final stages of the EC's investigation, discuss the potential negative impact of this trans-Atlantic rift.A Buyer's Guide to Law Firm Software
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A Step-by-Step Flight Plan for Legal Teams: Fire Up Your Productivity Engine and Deliver High-Impact Work Faster
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Corporate Transparency Act Resource Kit
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Revenue, Profit, Cash: Managing Law Firms for Success
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