By Ellen Bardash | October 26, 2020
The case challenged a proposed reclassification effectively transferring the majority of founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg's interest in Facebook without diminishing his voting power.
Delaware Business Court Insider
By Ellen Bardash | October 22, 2020
The shareholder derivative suit alleges 10 of the San Diego-based company's officers and directors intentionally gave investors nonspecific information and failed to disclose the risk factors of Pracinostat, a drug for which an international clinical trial was halted in July just before MEI's share price dropped more than 18% in a day.
By Ross Todd | October 1, 2020
Said Darren Robbins of Robbins Geller: "It seems to me like it fits like a glove."
By Alaina Lancaster | September 16, 2020
The moves are part of U.S. Attorney David Anderson's ongoing efforts to speed up prosecution timelines.
By Dylan Jackson | September 16, 2020
Susan Muck and Kevin Muck said they were particularly drawn to Wilmer's strong Washington, D.C., presence, which is a highly sought-after quality among tech and life science clients that often face regulatory issues.
By Ann C. Kim and Jamie Hennelly | August 25, 2020
The economic uncertainty created by COVID-19 has regulators like the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Enforcement ramping up its efforts to identify and prevent fraud in the wake of COVID-19, says Hogan Lovells' Ann Kim and Jamie Hennelly.
By Alaina Lancaster | August 21, 2020
The lawsuit, filed in July, claims Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg "wants Blacks to be seen but not heard."
By Stephen Blake | August 14, 2020
The continued widespread business uncertainty caused by COVID-19 and the associated higher market volatility provide a fertile environment for event-driven securities litigation, says Simpson Thacher & Bartlett's Stephen Blake.
By Tom McParland | August 12, 2020
The ruling, from a three-judge panel of the Second Circuit, upheld a trial court's decision denying investors' motion to file a third amended complaint against the California-based food chain over the outbreaks that sickened more than 600 people in 2014 and 2015.
By Ellen Bardash | July 31, 2020
Since San Jose-based Zoom went public, it was falsely promoted as having "robust security capabilities," including "end-to-end encryption," and although initial offering documents included language about the potential risks of cybersecurity, and that language wasn't indicative of the level of risk known at the time.
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