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By Chris O'Malley | April 1, 2024
The DOJ's and FTC's retreat from long-standing guidance on information-sharing appears to have been intended "to inject some uncertainty—to make people nervous about antitrust," Fenwick & West partner Steve Albertson said. "And it worked."
6 minute read
By Trudy Knockless | April 1, 2024
Sixty-nine-year-old Bill Tennis, who's been GC of DiamondRock Hospitality for 14 of the company's 24 years in business, plans to retire in June.
3 minute read
By Chris O'Malley | April 1, 2024
Tesla had struck a dismissive tone in its motion to dismiss, saying the suit lacked required specificity. But a judge ruled that the automaker had misstated the standard the EEOC had to meet.
3 minute read
By Greg Andrews | April 1, 2024
Zac Hudson's credentials could hardly be more impressive: naval officer, Yale Law School graduate and law clerk for two Supreme Court justices.
3 minute read
By Maria Dinzeo | March 29, 2024
Among the GCs plotting retirements were John Deere's Mary Jones and Pitney Bowes' Daniel Goldstein.
3 minute read
By Chris O'Malley | March 29, 2024
Jennifer Brown returns to St. Louis-based Mercy from New Mexico-based Graphite Health, a nonprofit developing digital health tools, where she's been chief administrative officer and general counsel.
2 minute read
By Chris O'Malley | March 28, 2024
Deborah Gordon is leaving Houston-based Memorial Hermann Health System to take the legal reins of one of the world's most-lauded hospitals.
2 minute read
By Chris O'Malley | March 28, 2024
Deborah Gordon is leaving Houston-based Memorial Hermann Health System to take the legal reins of one of the world's most-lauded hospitals.
2 minute read
By Maria Dinzeo | March 28, 2024
Chief Legal Affairs Officer Kevin Rhodes "drove actions to reduce risk and uncertainty through reduced exposure to litigation and regulatory risk," 3M's compensation committee says in the company's newly filed proxy statement.
2 minute read
By Chris O'Malley | March 28, 2024
The Department of Labor fined Morristown, Tennessee-based Tuff Torq $296,951 and secured a court order requiring it to disgorge $1.5 million—a month of profits—after a January inspection found 10 illegally employed children as young as 14 subjected to "oppressive" conditions.
6 minute read
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