By Patrick Smith | January 20, 2021
The new additions, from Munger Tolles & Olson and Ernst & Young, respectively, show the firm has no intention of slowing its lateral hiring pace from 2020.
By Meredith Hobbs | January 11, 2021
Deborah Dugan, the former head of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, previously alleged that Joel Katz, the founder of Greenberg Traurig's entertainment practice and its Atlanta office, had sexually harassed her.
By Alaina Lancaster | December 30, 2020
Give some of The Recorder's top stories one last read before ringing in a brand-new year.
By Amanda Bronstad | November 20, 2020
U.S. District Judge Haywood Gilliam of the Northern District of California appointed Tina Wolfson, of Ahdoot & Wolfson, and Tiasha Palikovic, of Wittels McInturff Palikovic, as interim class counsel for about half a dozen class actions, citing their legal strategy and diversity.
By Bo Pearl, Jeffrey Brown, Jeremy Salinger, and Annie Alvarado | October 16, 2020
"There is a solution, one that allows compensation for college athletes while protecting their amateur status, and affords colleges the opportunity to undam revenue sources, offering relief from fallow periods like the one we're in now," says Paul Hastings' Bo Pearl and Jeremy Salinger; Jeffrey Brown of Bates White; and Annie Alvarado, former captain of the UCLA Women's Soccer Team and a third-year law student.
By Dan Clark | September 24, 2020
"We have the team physicians that we rely on [for advice] and we have a great relationship with a large hospital system in Orange County, California, and we've leveraged that relationship several times," said Kate Rodin, the chief legal officer of the Anaheim Ducks and the team's Honda Center stadium.
By Ben Feuer | September 18, 2020
The team's $50 million loss in the First District last month includes a valuable tip for lawyers who draft contracts with arbitration clauses.
By Alaina Lancaster | September 3, 2020
Producer Neal Moritz's mentioning of prior arbitration agreements in a lawsuit against Universal City Studios does not mean the dispute is bound by them, California's Second District Court of Appeal ruled.
By Tom McParland | August 12, 2020
Lawyer and author Linda Hirshman claimed that Don Franzen, a Los Angeles attorney, misrepresented his rights to Hirshman's book "Sisters in Law" and interfered with negotiations to option the 2015 best-seller to actress Alyssa Milano's production companies.
By Amanda Bronstad | August 10, 2020
The U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation's order created the first MDL involving lawsuits stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic. The panel rejected coordination of cases against banks over their handling of COVID-19 relief loans to small businesses, and payments to agents.
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