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Former Merrill Lynch Lawyers Landing on Their Feet
When Merrill Lynch & Co. sold itself last year to Bank of America, the merger resulted in job losses for thousands of employees, including Merrill's in-house lawyers. Several sources say that dozens of lawyers have been laid off, with the bulk of the cuts coming in the bank's New York headquarters. Some of these attorneys have found new in-house positions, others are joining law firms, and a few are heading into nonlegal fields.Landing on Their Feet: Merrill Lynch Attorneys Find Opportunities in a Crisis
Few businesses symbolized the might of Wall Street as much as Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc., right down to the bull on the investment bank's logo. But while Merrill was able to survive numerous financial traumas — including the stock market crash of 1929 — the current economic crisis proved too much.In Practice: The Latest in Whistleblowing
Protections afforded by the Dodd-Frank Act are now being scrutinized by trial and appellate courts, explains securities lawyer Jared Kopel.Ineligible In-House Counsel, Multijurisdictional Practitioners and Pro Hac Vice Attorneys
Notice to the bar.Ineligible Pro Hac Vice Attorneys, In-House Counsel and Multijurisdictional Practitioners
Notice to the bar.Cerberus, Deason Bid for Computer Services Outsourcer ACS
Corporate venture capital groups like to crow about how they nurture ecosystems by investing in technologies that support their parent's products. IBM Corp.'s VC unit hasn't sunk a cent in startups that develop tech built around IBM's BladeCenter servers, but it has reason to brag.First Union: SunTrust Misled Investors
Battling for control of Wachovia Corp., First Union asked the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to look into comments made in April by the CEO of rival bidder SunTrust Banks. According to a source familiar with the company, First Union believes the comments may have misled investors about SunTrust's intentions and violated SEC guidelines.Apple seen raising dividend more than 50 percent to $15.7 billion
Apple is poised to boost its dividend by more than half, providing investors hit by a share slump with one of the highest yields in the U.S. technology industry. The company could fund a payout with existing cash flow without using profit from overseas.Daily Decision Service Alert: Vol. 20, No. 44 ? March 8, 2011
Daily decision alert.Corporate Transparency Act Resource Kit
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Law Firm Operational Considerations for the Corporate Transparency Act
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