0 results for 'CVS Health'
Potential Securities Fraud: 'Storm Warnings' Clarified
Andrew J. Entwistle, a founding partner of Entwistle & Cappucci, and Richard W. Gonnello, a partner at the firm, write that earlier this month, a split panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit reversed a lower court's decision to dismiss a securities class action filed against Merck & Co. on the grounds that it was time-barred. In holding that the shareholders' claims were timely filed, the court clarified a significant ambiguity in its inquiry-notice jurisprudence, i.e., whether a shareholder's duty to investigate potential fraud is triggered by evidence of possible or probable wrongdoing. While the Court held that evidence of possible wrongdoing suffices, the opinion makes clear that something more than a theoretical possibility is required.View more book results for the query "CVS Health"
Booming business makes Brickell new hot spot
As thousands of young professionals, students and families move into new residential towers in the area, Brickell is emerging as a retail hot spot rivaling South Beach, Coconut Grove and Coral Gables.Walgreens Fends Off Accusations It Released Patient Information for Marketing Campaign
Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Valerie Manno Schurr has ruled Walgreens did not release Florida patient information to pharmaceutical companies, granting summary judgment in favor of the Deerfield, Ill.-based chain. He found that two women customers failed to show Walgreens breached confidentiality or a fiduciary duty by sending them prescription renewal reminders in the mail. The case raises a question no one has answered -- can pharmacies legitimately profit from prescription records by offering to market a drugmaker's product to those most likely to use it?When Insolvency Looms: Knowing Where You Stand
Frank Aquila, a partner at Sullivan & Cromwell, and Peter Naismith, an associate at the firm, write that some cases over the past 17 years that have refused to recognize theories such as the action for "deepening insolvency" have left Delaware directors feeling a bit more confident of their ability to navigate treacherous financial waters free of judicial second-guessing. Counsel should however, in an abundance of caution, remind boards of the importance of considering creditors' interests as soon as the corporation becomes financially distressed, even though directors do not yet owe fiduciary duties to those creditors, the authors say.A Buyer's Guide to Law Firm Software
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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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