Daily Business Review | News|Profile
By Michael A. Mora | June 7, 2022
"You can't cancel your face and get a new one," Paul J. Geller, a partner at Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd, said about Facebook's facial-recognition system that led to the company paying a more than $650 million settlement.
Daily Business Review | News|Profile
By Michael A. Mora | June 6, 2022
"When does rehabilitation become enough?" asked Brian Tannebaum, special counsel at Bast Amron in Miami, who represents the disbarred attorney who accumulated over 13,300 community service hours.
By Michael A. Mora | June 3, 2022
One of these 17 candidates will rise to the Florida Supreme Court to fill the vacancy set to be created Aug. 31, when Justice Alan Lawson is set to retire, after more than five years on the bench.
By Mason Lawlor | June 3, 2022
The South Carolina Court of Appeals has affirmed a trial court ruling suppressing evidence seized during a drug bust in 2017.
By Mason Lawlor | June 3, 2022
The South Carolina Court of Appeals has affirmed a trial court ruling suppressing evidence seized during a drug bust in 2017.
By Colleen Murphy | June 2, 2022
A former employee in the city of Norfolk, Virginia, won her grievance proceeding after she was wrongfully terminated by the city, but it was her actions after termination that led to accusations of "unclean hands."
By Jessie Yount | June 2, 2022
John Polson is the first leader in the firm's 80-year history to be based outside of Atlanta.
Daily Business Review | Profile
By Michael A. Mora | June 2, 2022
"Many economists believed that the success of the U.S. was that you could try to start a business here and fail and not be executed," U.S. Bankruptcy Court Chief Judge Emeritus A. Jay Cristol said. "A fresh start or a second opportunity are major factors in the success of our economy."
By Andrew Maloney | June 2, 2022
A string of Miami hires and office openings may or may not have been coincidental. But Big Law's latest hot market signals both a shift in thinking about geography and the incentives to grow.
By Michael A. Mora | June 1, 2022
U.S. District Judge Valerie E. Caproni ruled that Nipro Corp.'s "continued foot-dragging'' justified a higher interest rate, while she noted that Boies Schiller's rates "are not outside the norm for comparable attorneys and firms'' and was comparable to rates "for partners at prominent firms in New York.''
Presented by BigVoodoo
The Legal Intelligencer honors lawyers leaving a mark on the legal community in Pennsylvania and Delaware.
Consulting Magazine recognizes leaders in technology across three categories Leadership, Client Service and Innovation.
Celebrate outstanding achievement in law firms, chambers, in-house legal departments and alternative business structures.
We are seeking an associate to join our Employee Benefits practice. Candidates should have three to six years of employee benefits experienc...
Associate attorney position at NJ Immigration Law firm: Leschak & Associates, LLC, based in Freehold, NJ, is looking for a full time ass...
Duane Morris LLP has an immediate opening for a senior level, highly motivated litigation associate to join its dynamic and growing Employme...
MELICK & PORTER, LLP PROMOTES CONNECTICUT PARTNERS HOLLY ROGERS, STEVEN BANKS, and ALEXANDER AHRENS