The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Wayne Pollock | March 8, 2018
For the longest time, the life of a lawyer's cease and desist letter was an unpleasant one. For one, the letter was typically written too quickly to allow for important considerations such as, oh, readability and persuasion.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Thomas W. Ude Jr. | February 23, 2018
Almost daily of late, there is a new report or announcement regarding the intersection of religious beliefs permits and anti-discrimination principles.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Craig R. Tractenberg | February 22, 2018
How can we help our clients build a chain of locations? Can our emerging clients ever compete with the big companies, the private equity companies, the multinationals with structured finance?
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Megan E. Grossman | February 9, 2018
On Jan. 25, the associate attorney general of the United States issued a policy that prohibits the Department of Justice (DOJ) civil litigators from using guidance documents to establish violations of law in civil enforcement actions.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. Dannunzio | January 30, 2018
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has agreed to hear argument on whether the nation's first sweetened-beverage tax stands up to legal scrutiny.
By The Legal Intelligencer | January 30, 2018
In the Legal's Products Liability, Mass Torts & Class Action supplement, read about company-generated documents and emails, navigating choppy waters…
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Eric Rosenberg | January 30, 2018
Over the last seven years, the U.S. Supreme Court has rapidly and dramatically altered the landscape of personal jurisdiction law. Specifically, the court issued six opinions that overturned a lower court's exercise of personal jurisdiction, reinforced due process limitations on state assertions of jurisdiction, and narrowed the scope of constitutionally permissible general and specific personal jurisdiction.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Michael C. Zogby and Shane M. O'Connell | January 29, 2018
Courts have worked to construct rules for use before and during trial that ensure only true business records—that is, records of regularly conducted activity that carry an air of trustworthiness and reliability—are admitted into evidence, while avoiding admission of day-to-day communications and other documents that cannot be categorized as business records.
By Jennifer Williams-Alvarez | January 25, 2018
Turner joined Hershey back in July 2012 and has seen the company through some challenging times.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Craig R. Tractenberg | January 25, 2018
Franchising requires a balance of entrepreneurial risk taking with adherence to a brand wide system. The system needs to be unique to draw customers but simple enough to be replicated across geographies. The brand needs to promise a reliable customer experience while entertaining innovations to keep mature customers interested while attracting new guests.
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