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Henry, plaintiffs-appellants v. U.S. Trust Company of California N.A., defendant-appellee
When ESOP Incurs Debt to Buy Stock Then Sells Stock To Cancel Debt, Cancellation Does Not Reduce Stock PriceA long-running ERISA class action against Bear Stearns ended with a whimper this week when employees who claimed to have lost $215 million when their retirement savings were invested in Bear Stearns stock agreed to settle for $10 million.
Marvell Deal Would Have $16 Million Payday
Marvell Technology Group has reached a tentative deal to settle derivative litigation over alleged backdating, the Santa Clara, Calif., semiconductor company reported in a regulatory filing Friday. In exchange for dropping the suits, Marvell said it would agree to "corporate governance enhancements" and pay the plaintiffs lawyers up to $16 million -- a big haul for plaintiffs lawyers in a derivative case, several securities lawyers said.Investors' Lawsuit Proceeds in Aftermath of Bear Stearns Collapse
A federal judge in Manhattan has given the go-ahead to proceed for one of the largest securities class action suits filed by investors in the wake of the credit crisis. In a 398-page opinion made public Friday, Southern District Judge Robert Sweet denied motions to dismiss the action against Bear Stearns, its outside auditor Deloitte & Touche, and seven individual defendants.Marvell Deal Would Have $16 Million Payday
Marvell Technology Group has reached a tentative deal to settle derivative litigation over alleged backdating, the Santa Clara, Calif., semiconductor company reported in a regulatory filing on June 6. In exchange for dropping the suits, Marvell said it would agree to "corporate governance enhancements" and pay the plaintiffs lawyers up to $16 million -- a big haul for plaintiffs lawyers in a derivative case, several securities lawyers said.401(k) Fee Suits Not Soon To Retire
Litigation concerning excessive administrative fees charged to employees by their 401(k) plans is heating up and adding a new twist.Judge's Unusual Order Sparks Law Firm Diversity Debate
A stir recently erupted in the securities class action bar after Southern District of New York Judge Harold Baer Jr. issued an order in a case against Gildan Activewear, directing two of the largest firms in the field, Labaton Sucharow and Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd, to "make every effort" to put at least one woman and one minority lawyer on the case. Plaintiffs lawyers interviewed said they had not heard of other judges making similar orders, and some class action attorneys said Baer is going too far.NY Judge Uses Novel Order to Encourage Wider Diversity in Law Firms
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