By Cheryl Miller | June 22, 2020
The deal appears to protect programs including dependency counsel, court interpreters, collaborative and drug court projects, equal access funds, the Court Appointed Special Advocate Program and other specialized projects that were slated for cuts in Newsom's proposal.
By Edward C. Barnidge and Richard A. Olderman | June 19, 2020
To the extent defendants are looking to dispose of the litigation prior to class certification and prior to costly and time-consuming litigation, several key defenses may be asserted in a timely motion to dismiss, depending on the facts of the case.
By Edward C. Barnidge and Richard A. Olderman | June 18, 2020
In this first installment in a two-part series, the authors, two lawyers at Williams & Connolly, consider California's new cybersecurity statute; new rulings on key issues; and available defenses at the motion to dismiss stage in class actions stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic.
By Natalie Pierce, Julie Stockton and Courtney Chambers, Littler | June 18, 2020
The public's tolerance for sharing personal data for the greater good may be heightened in the short term as we develop harm-reduction technologies to battle the virus, but a long-term view of employee privacy will be imperative for continued successful integration of AI in the workplace.
By Gigi Birchfield and PJ Harari | June 17, 2020
GC hiring has continued for many tech startups even amid the current uncertain environment. Companies need in-house legal counsel to navigate new challenges posed by the pandemic, including regulatory and compliance, labor, and privacy issues.
The American Lawyer | News|Research
By Patrick Smith | June 17, 2020
In a survey of law firm respondents, 25% are forfeiting more revenue due to unpaid bills compared to the months leading up the COVID-19 outbreak.
By Robert Milligan and Joshua Salinas | June 15, 2020
This unprecedented pandemic has created new traps and areas of uncertainty for businesses navigating California's consumer protection laws
By Ross Todd | June 12, 2020
The stipulated injunction filed with the court Friday, which still requires sign-off from San Francisco's Board of Supervisors and from U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar, who is overseeing the case, would require the city to remove up to 300 tents and encampments from the neighborhood's streets by July 20.
By Tom McParland | June 12, 2020
The embattled celebrity attorney, who was convicted in February of trying to extort Nike Inc., has renewed his bid to transfer the case charging him with stealing money from his former client, adult-film star Stormy Daniels, from New York to Los Angeles.
By Scott Pink and John Dermody, O'Melveny | June 12, 2020
Governments and businesses alike are considering how to leverage new technologies to make contact tracing efforts more effective. But such innovative contact tracing methods raise a host of privacy concerns, forcing a reckoning with how we balance privacy and public health.
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