0 results for 'The Wall Street Journal'
Prenups and High Net Worth Divorces: Do They Solve Everything?
“Prenups” are not able to solve every problem that arises in a divorce, even when the terms are clearly spelled out and agreed upon beforehand.MeToo Movement's Impact on Morals Clauses and the Right to Clawback Compensation
Including morality, clawback and/or liquidated damage clauses in employment agreements sends a clear message to executives that they better not engage in such behavior.Early Termination Provisions: A Landlord's Saving Grace…If Done Right
In their Commercial Real Estate column, Menachem J. Kastner and Ally Hack focus on the early termination provision, guiding the practitioner through the pitfalls of a poorly drafted early termination provision, and advise how to craft a proper and effective one.EPA Seeking Comments on Cost-Benefit Analysis Regulations
Once the EPA identifies a source of potential environmental harm, it then decides whether and how to regulate, and certain statutes also require the EPA to perform a cost-benefit analysis. By way of background, the risk management framework for federal agencies started to change in the early 1980s.View more book results for the query "The Wall Street Journal"
Cracking the Puzzle of Corporate Anonymity
A number of investigative techniques can bring even the most ingeniously opaque arrangements into the light.Cracking the Puzzle of Corporate Anonymity
A number of investigative techniques can bring even the most ingeniously opaque arrangements into the light.Michael Cohen's $130K Payment to Stormy Daniels: What's Next at the FEC
Trump Organization lawyer Michael Cohen's $130,000 payment to adult actress Stephanie Clifford—Stormy Daniels on stage—is the subject of a complaint at the FEC. Here's what to know about the review process.Judge Tosses 'Zombie Go Boom' Advertisement Suit Against YouTube
A federal judge ruled YouTube's agreement with content providers gives it the discretion not to display ads.Weinstein Co. Asset Sale Averts Bankruptcy, but Clouds Remain Over Its Future
A group of investors on Thursday said that it had reached a $500 million agreement to buy the Weinstein Co., reviving a deal that just days before seemed to be dead, despite the high-profile intervention of New York state Attorney General Eric Schneiderman.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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Practical Guidance Journal: Protecting Work Product in a Generative AI World
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