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Substance Over Form: Application of Anti-SLAPP Statutes in Federal Court
Many states have enacted statutes curtailing lawsuits designed to chill free speech. Known as anti-SLAPP statutes, these laws often include mechanisms to protect defendants from the burdens of litigation—for example, by allowing defendants to obtain a prompt dismissal through a special pre-trial motion, to avoid discovery and to recover their attorneys' fees upon prevailing.Judge Partially Dismisses Negligence Suit Against Trucking Company Over Employee's Road Rage Killing
A West Virginia federal judge partially dismissed a widow's suit against a trucking company after one of its drivers shot and killed her husband in a road rage incident, ruling she failed to prove that the company knew or should have known that he possessed or carried a loaded, improperly stored firearm.The 2023 WIPL Awards: In-House Best Mentor
For this award, Corporate Counsel recognizes those who have excelled at mentoring others in achieving their career objectives through moral, social, and intellectual support.AI Is Here to Stay. What Will It Take to Use it Wisely?
We regularly hear concerns about the ability of Generative AI to provide the kind of quality that clients expect from their lawyers, and about whether lawyers will be "replaced" by technology. We think both of these concerns are frequently overstated, and distract lawyers from the very timely opportunity to shape AI and the powerful adaptations and applications it will inspire.View more book results for the query "Travelers"
Insurance Coverage Q&A: Tires and a Nail
In this Q&A of the week, an insured runs over a nail with her vehicle and wants to know if it would be a collision loss or excluded under road damage to tires.Electrician's Fall Leads to $5 Million Settlement in Bergen Wrongful Death Case
The estate of an electrician who died after a 30-foot fall in the workplace received payment of a $5 million settlement in a Bergen County wrongful death suit, Roscitt v. Chefler Foods, on Oct. 15.'Hyatt Hotels': Are Omissions From Gross Income an Accounting Method?
'Hyatt Hotels v. Commissioner' underscores that even an approach to accounting for income and expenses that has been applied consistently by a taxpayer over many years is not necessarily a "method of accounting" subject to the government's broad power to impose adjustments under Section 481(a).Insights and Strategies for Effective Succession Planning in AM Law 100 Firms
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State AI Legislation Is on the Move in 2024
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2024 ESI Risk Management & Litigation Readiness Report
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Creating a Culture of Compliance
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