0 results for 'Harris Corporation'
Litigator of the Week Runners-Up and Shout Outs
Peter Stris of Stris & Maher got an important win this week for ERISA plaintiffs at the Second Circuit.The 2024 Am Law 100: Ranked by Profits Per Lawyer
Profits per lawyer is an alternative way of looking at firm profitability, intended to reduce the influence of factors such as leverage. The average is about $518,000, and the list-topper is about $3.04 million.No More Safety Under the Radar: Antitrust Enforcement Against Roll-ups and Serial Acquisitions
The FTC and DOJ are geared up to investigate and challenge serial acquisitions or roll-ups by private equtity firms. Many of these transactions have flown "under the radar" because they were below the Hart-Scott-Rodino Act's reporting threshold.Alston Makes Major Leap in Latest M&A League Tables
King & Spalding also ranked among the top 25 in LSEG's rankings of deals in the Americas this year.View more book results for the query "Harris Corporation"
'Match' Opinion Stresses Delaware Courts' Focus on Investors, Scrutiny of Controlling Shareholders
"The Delaware courts are going to continue to have a lot of skepticism when it comes to conflicted controller transactions," Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson senior counsel Gail Weinstein said.Two Claims Remain in Electric Transmission Defendants Winter Storm MDL
The ruling cites specific allegations made by plaintiffs lawyers, including that the TDUs refused to follow any plan for load shedding and instead flipped switches without foresight or concern.Key Delaware Decision in 'Activision' Upends Standard Board Practices for Approving Mergers
This article lays out practice points in response to the Delaware Court of Chancery's recent decision in In Ap-Fonden v. Activision, which opens a new frontier for challenging a board's process in approving mergers. It discusses the significance the decision has on the merger agreement processes as well as what practitioners should consider moving forward as they navigate this decision.Michael Lynch Was a Titan of British Tech. Then He Got Crosswise With HP
Lynch was CEO of the software firm Autonomy when HP bought it for $11 billion, a deal that's gone down as one of the biggest flops in M&A history. Prosecutors allege he duped the Silicon Valley giant into overpaying by inflating Autonomy's financial performance at a time the company was tanking.Corporate Transparency Act Resource Kit
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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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The Ultimate Guide to Remote Legal Work
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