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October 01, 2003 |

From Akin Gump to Kramer Levin

Letters A through K in the firm-by-firm summary of the responses to The American Lawyer's 2003 Associate Survey.
124 minute read
November 05, 2004 |

The Firm Reports: From A to F

105 minute read
June 12, 2007 |

General Assignment Order, 2007-08

Notice to the bar.
10 minute read
October 19, 2011 |

2011 IOLTA Ineligible List

The Supreme Court has entered an Order declaring attorneys who have not complied with the mandatory IOLTA program to be administratively ineligible to practice law. The Court's Order, which takes effect October 21, 2011, and the list of ineligible attorneys are being published with this Notice.
16 minute read
Cohen Milstein Role Under Fire in Robo-Signing Case
Publication Date: 2013-06-03
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The Nevada Supreme Court is expected to take up arguments in a high-profile robo-signing case in which a mortgage processing services firm is challenging the legal authority of the state's attorney general to hire Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll on a contingent fee basis.

November 16, 2011 |

Contractual Limits on Limitation Periods: Employers Battle Back

Employers in N.J. can lawfully limit employees from taking full advantage of the statutes of limitations in employee-friendly legislation.
7 minute read
October 11, 2004 |

Workers' Wiretap Case Sent Back to State Court

A group of 370 union workers who claim they were subjected to illegal surveillance at a Reading, Penn., factory have won the right to pursue their wiretap and invasion of privacy claims in state court, as the Third U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled the federal judge who dismissed their case had no jurisdiction.
4 minute read
October 26, 2005 |

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS

Authored
3 minute read
November 23, 2009 |

PaLAW 2009 Top 100 Firms

22 minute read
December 15, 2006 |

White-Collar Bar Wants More From Department of Justice

After pressure from judges, Congress and the corporate world, the Department of Justice announced this week a series of policy changes that aim to stop prosecutors from using a corporation's refusal to share certain information as a check against the company when it comes time to decide whether to prosecute. While policy adjustments were thought to be much-needed by the white-collar defense bar, some practitioners are questioning whether those changes will have any real effect.
5 minute read

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