The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Lizzy McLellan | October 15, 2020
In layoff notices earlier this year, the firm said COVID-19 had caused a significant decrease in business demand, as moratoriums on foreclosures took effect.
By C. Ryan Barber | September 2, 2020
Sandra Moser arrives from Quinn Emanuel, where she had been a co-leader of the firm's white-collar defense practice. Robin Nunn, a former in-house lawyer at American Express and Capital One, was most recently the chairwoman of Dechert's consumer financial services practice.
By Amanda Bronstad | August 5, 2020
In its first orders related to the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation refused on Wednesday to coordinate cases brought against banks over their handling of COVID-19 relief loans to small businesses, citing the small number of cases and varied experiences of the plaintiff applicants.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Erica Silverman | July 14, 2020
Drawn to Ballard's work with private equity firms and large public companies, Coogan said that he was seeking "a much bigger, local platform" to adapt to a changing business environment.
By Dan Clark | July 14, 2020
"Legal departments are more creative in breaking a matter down to its component parts in order to find ways to get at least a little predictability on what they are going to spend," Kristina Satkunas, director of strategic consulting at LexisNexis CounselLink in Richmond, Virginia, said.
By Erica Silverman | June 11, 2020
Randolph Adler says his new firm has been able to "brain drain" Big Law thanks to its approach to compensation and client service. "The midsized sophisticated boutique market is going to experience wild growth," he says.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Maxwell Briskman Stanfield | March 2, 2020
No matter where a business is in its life cycle, however, there are fairly new and unique ways to raise capital.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Joseph N. Frabizzio | February 18, 2020
Over the past few years, we have received a growing number of inquiries regarding the taxation of so-called virtual or cryptocurrencies from individuals who have purchased such currency and others who are mining the currency.
By The Legal Intelligencer | February 18, 2020
In The Legal's Wealth Management/Trusts & Estates supplement read about how GRATs are a great way to transfer money to loved ones, inherited wealth and the divorce process, as well as several takes on what's next after the enactment of the SECURE Act.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Rudolph J. Di Massa, Jr. and Keri L. Wintle | February 13, 2020
Last month, U.S. Bankruptcy Court Chief Judge Cecelia Morris for the Southern District of New York entered a decision granting summary judgment to pro se debtor, Kevin Jared Rosenberg, finding that Rosenberg had satisfied the "undue hardship" standard set forth in Section 523(a)(8) of the Bankruptcy Code, and ordering the discharge of Rosenberg's student loan debt of more than $220,000.
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