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March 31, 2005 |

Akamai-Speedera Merger a Case of Sue and Make Up

One way to end a protracted and bitter battle between two rivals -- marry them. Fenwick & West helped the shotgun wedding of two Internet technology companies that was consumated with $130 million stock deal earlier this month. Thanks to another firm's conflict of interest 15 years ago, Morgan, Lewis ended up at the center of an $11 billion-plus acquisition that's being called a throwback to the massive buyouts of the 1980s.
4 minute read
May 10, 1999 |

How to Download the Perfect Summer Associate

In the late 1980s, law firms wooed would-be associates with endless rounds of cocktail parties, barbecues and nighttime cruises. As the industry surges again, competition is once again fierce for the best and the brightest. This time, though, senior law firm managers are being called to meet the younger generation where it lives -- on the Internet.
5 minute read
Feds Seek $226 Million from Kolon over DuPont's Kevlar Secrets
Publication Date: 2012-10-18
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McGuireWoods and Crowell & Moring scored a $920 million win for DuPont last year after convincing a jury that South Korea's Kolon Industries stole trade secrets related to Kevlar. Now it's the Justice Department's turn.

October 23, 2000 |

In and Out: The Challenge of Associate Retention

Firms sink a lot of time and money into recruiting candidates with just the right mix of grades, gumption and personality. But what happens then? A lot of them leave. According to a recent study, about eight percent of associates left during their first year of employment; cumulative losses reach 38 percent by the third year, and nearly 60 percent by the fifth year.
8 minute read
June 11, 1999 |

Black Employees Take Coke to Court

A U.S. District Court judge ordered Coca Cola Co. to deliver six years' worth of computerized data about thousands of workers to answer a disrcimination suit brought by more than 1,500 black employees. The company argues that the plaintiffs' claims are too individualized to be resolved in a class action.
4 minute read
February 14, 2011 |

In-House Counsel Can Cut Budgets While Firms Increase Profits

"What can I do to win your business?" is a question Jason Mark Anderman frequently hears as an in-house attorney at a Fortune 500 company. He also thought it was the wrong question. To him, it exemplified two problems: 1. He did not know enough about the internal pressures a company faced in selecting outside counsel, and 2. he did not have anything uniquely competitive, compared to other firms, to focus on.
8 minute read
Federal Law Preempts State Law Claims Against Foreign Airlines, Second Circuit Rules
Publication Date: 2012-10-12
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An appellate court ruled on Thursday that the Federal Aviation Act preempts the state regulation of all airlines. The decision came in a long-running litigation in which major carriers have been accused of conspiring to keep cargo shipping rates artificially high.

In Escalating Copyright Suit, EA Hits Zynga With Anti-SLAPP Motion
Publication Date: 2012-10-29
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Electronic Arts has invoked a California law designed to protect citizens' constitutional rights to lash back at rival Zynga in the gamemakers' ongoing legal tussle in federal court. The dispute between the competitors has become increasingly combative since EA sued Zynga for copyright infringement. The latest fusillade came Friday as EA asked a judge to throw out Zynga's counterclaim and award fees and costs under California's anti-SLAPP law.

August 16, 1999 |

Yes, Virginia, There Is Jurisdiction

Be careful what you type next time you log on to your favorite Internet chat room or newsgroup. At least, that's the message sent by a federal judge in the Eastern District of Virginia earlier this summer. Judge T.S. Ellis III held that a court in Virginia possessed personal jurisdiction in a defamation case brought by a Virginia resident against two out-of-state defendants based solely on the location of the server from which the defamatory messages were sent.
4 minute read

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