By Scott Flaherty | April 26, 2018
The appeals court took a dim view of tactics that trial lawyer Mark Lanier used with respect to expert witnesses.
By Scott Graham | April 25, 2018
After Tuesday's ruling in SAS Institute v. Iancu, petitioners face a higher risk of getting a final written decisions finding challenged patent claims valid, leaving them estopped from fighting in district court.
By Michael Booth | April 25, 2018
A Texas appeals court has overturned $150,000 in sanctions, remanded for reconsideration an award of $375,383 in attorney fees, and vacated nonmonetary sanctions imposed by the trial judge on the operator of website purportedly aimed at stamping online bullying and other more lurid practices.
By Michael Riccardi | April 23, 2018
The Fourth Circuit held that Oregon-based saw-maker SawStop's allegations that the companies had colluded to boycott its patented injury-prevention technology were barred by the four-year statute of limitations for antitrust claims.
By Scott Flaherty | April 20, 2018
Ahead of an upcoming Dallas trial, Proskauer's defense team filed a notice on Thursday with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit as part of an effort to escape claims from an official committee of investors who lost money in R. Allen Stanford's massive, long-running Ponzi scheme.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | April 20, 2018
The moves occurred in the wake of the recent merger between Strasburger & Price and Clark Hill.
By Kristen Rasmussen | April 19, 2018
Ebong Aloysius Tilong is believed to have fled the United States. Last October, he was sentenced, in absentia, to one of the longest-ever terms for health care fraud for his role in a $13 million Medicare scheme in Houston.
By C. Ryan Barber | April 18, 2018
A team from Gibson Dunn fought the CFPB in the D.C. Circuit—and now they're in the Fifth Circuit challenging the agency's single-director design. Will one of these cases reach the U.S. Supreme Court?
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Tom McParland | April 17, 2018
A vice chancellor of the Delaware Court of Chancery on Monday refused Energy Transfer Equity's bid for a second chance at claiming a nearly $1.5 billion break-up fee stemming from the pipeline company's failed merger with The Williams Cos. Inc.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | April 17, 2018
Two families of children killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting sue InfoWars host Alex Jones for defamation.
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