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September 15, 2005 |

Corporate Securities

John C. Coffee, Jr., Professor of Law at Columbia University Law School, writes that the WorldCom decision makes clear that Rule 176 provides no real protection from Section 11 liability, and the SEC's "securities offerings reforms" did nothing to change that. He suggests extending a qualified immunity to independent directors if they adopt procedures that promise far more careful investigations than in the past.
14 minute read
March 11, 2008 |

Big-Firm Associates: Why They Go and How to Keep Them

At the 250 largest law firms, the arrows are pointing up for many associate indicators. But for all this effort, one critical indicator is down. The larger law firms are reported to be losing 30, 40, 50 percent of associates after three to four years � with half to two-thirds of the defections due to associate, not firm, choice.
9 minute read
May 28, 2008 |

The Lost Generation

An examination of why young associates are leaving their large law firms after only five years and what can be done to stop this short tenure.
9 minute read
July 06, 1999 |

Did Amoco's Efforts Backfire?

It appears that BP Amoco's widely acclaimed but risky efforts to find out why a number of employees have been stricken with deadly brain cancer since 1986 is coming back to haunt the company. BP Amoco began its investigation before any employees brought suit against the company, but now some workers who have contracted benign brain tumors or extra-cranial cancers have become so angry with how the company has handled the matter that they have taken matters into their own hands.
8 minute read
Gibson Dunn's Olson Takes On Feds over Fannie/Freddie Bailout
Publication Date: 2013-07-08
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After helping to secure last month's historic gay marriage rulings at the U.S. Supreme Court, and while juggling several other high-profile cases, Ted Olson is now leading a challenge to the terms of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's $188 billion government bailout.

IP Litigation Roundup: Jurors Find Trade Secret Misappropriation by Best Buy
Publication Date: 2012-12-07
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A start-up that blames Best Buy for its demise got some revenge on Thursday, when jurors returned a verdict that the big-box retailer misappropriated trade secrets from Techforward, a software company that helped retailers offer "buyback plans" for consumer electronics. The jury awarded Techforward $22 million in damages, and a judge tacked on $5 million in punitive damages.

EMC Asks Federal Circuit to Ease Transfer of Infringement Claims
Publication Date: 2012-10-29
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After getting sued for patent infringement by a non-practicing entity called Oasis Research, EMC could have settled, like most of its co-defendants. Instead, the company filed an appeal with the Federal Circuit and won a ruling that limits the ability of patentholders to name multiple defendants in the same complaint. Now EMC is heading back to the Federal Circuit, seeking a ruling that could ease the way for more cases to be transferred out of the plaintiff-friendly Eastern District of Texas.

January 24, 2013 |

Report Finds Law Firm Culture Well-Suited for Failure

Law firm management consultants have encouraged managing partners to focus myopically on metrics that maximize short-term profits, but the upshot of that focus brings out an unpleasant culture in most big firms.
4 minute read
Tech Defendants Score on Joinder Question at Federal Circuit
Publication Date: 2012-05-07
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The America Invents Act clamped down on the kinds of multi-defendant patent infringement suits favored by "trolls," but plenty of such cases are still pending. Now, thanks to a win Friday by lawyers at Orrick and Gibson Dunn, defendants may be able to split the cases into much more manageable bites, in friendlier jurisdictions.

July 01, 1999 |

AMOCO

It appears that BP Amoco's widely acclaimed but risky efforts to find out why employees have been stricken with deadly brain cancer since 1986 is coming back to haunt the company. BP Amoco began its investigation before any employees brought suit against the company, but now some workers who have contracted benign brain tumors or extra-cranial cancers have become so angry with how the company has handled the matter--including Amoco's failure to share all the evidence it has uncovered with sick employees--th
8 minute read

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