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Whole Foods-Wild Oats deal leaves controversial legacy
Nobody expected the proposed $565 million acquisition of natural foods grocer Wild Oats by its rival Whole Foods Market to spark a food fight of epic proportions. But on March 6 -- after two years, $28 million in legal fees and expenses, and dozens of lawyers -- Whole Foods cut a deal to end the battle. The most important result of the battle may be a controversial D.C. Circuit opinion that some fear will make it too easy for the FTC to block future mergers.Whole Foods-Wild Oats Deal Leaves Controversial Legacy
Nobody expected the proposed $565 million acquisition of natural foods grocer Wild Oats by its rival Whole Foods Market to spark a food fight of epic proportions. But on March 6 -- after two years, $28 million in legal fees and expenses, and dozens of lawyers -- Whole Foods cut a deal to end the battle. The most important result of the battle may be a controversial D.C. Circuit opinion that some fear will make it too easy for the FTC to block future mergers.Ingredients in the Whole Foods, FTC Settlement
As corporate mergers go, the purchase of natural foods grocer Wild Oats by its rival Whole Foods Market looked like small potatoes (organic yellow fingerling, perhaps). Nobody expected the proposed $565 million acquisition to spark a food fight of epic proportions.Sham Divorces? Not for a Retirement Plan Administrator to Decide, Says Judge
A federal judge's ruling in an ERISA case shows that retirement plan administrators are in a bad spot when confronted with beneficiaries whom they suspect of gaming the system to access retirement payments, several experts say. The case involves a group of Continental Airlines senior pilots who allegedly obtained "sham divorces" to receive early payment of benefits from their retirement plan. The judge ruled that nothing in ERISA allows a plan administrator to question or thwart such suspected actions by plan beneficiaries.Home Restoration Client May Be Money Pit for Law Firms
At least four law firms have been left hanging for millions of dollars in legal fees from a home restoration company whose former chairman pleaded guilty to fraud involving another corporation. The latest firm left waiting for payment by Home Solutions of America is Riker Danzig. Ironically, the firm was defending the company in a suit brought by Morgan, Lewis & Bockius over $2.5 million in unpaid fees. Unpaid fees have also driven two Texas-based firms to try to withdraw from defending the company in a class action.Texas Court Sides With Weekly in HIV Suit
The Fifth Court of Appeals ruled in favor of a Dallas newspaper that had been accused of wrongfully disclosing the HIV-positive status of a person mentioned in one of its articles.Revenue, Profit, Cash: Managing Law Firms for Success
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Law Firm Operational Considerations for the Corporate Transparency Act
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Practical Guidance Journal: Protecting Work Product in a Generative AI World
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