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By R. Robin McDonald | October 31, 2018
U.S. District Judge Leigh Martin May said efforts to postpone her absentee ballot directive would violate absentee voters' due process rights.
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By Jamie Zysk Isani | October 31, 2018
In a case governed by Florida law, a proposal for settlement can be a useful tool to gain settlement leverage, particularly when there is no statutory or contractual fee-shifting provision.
1 minute read
By Mike Schneider | October 31, 2018
Shawn Hudson said that Tesla made false statements about the autopilot safety on his Tesla Model S.
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By Amanda Bronstad | October 31, 2018
Also up, a look at how a pancake eating contest turned perilous, and Morgan & Morgan gets hit with a $5M malpractice verdict.
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By John Council | October 30, 2018
It should have been a simple inquiry over a minor incident. But the police encounter with Connie Westfall, a partner and environmental lawyer with Clark Hill, escalated quickly.
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By Greg Land | October 30, 2018
The Georgia Court of Appeals said a Chatham County judge should have weighed a bank's claims that its rejected offer to settle a claim was reasonable at the time it was made before he denied a bid for attorney fees under the offer-of-settlement statute.
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Delaware Business Court Insider
By Tom McParland | October 30, 2018
A Delaware federal judge has denied Intel Corp.'s bid to transfer an infringement suit to California, where the chip giant is already facing claims that it had infringed patents for semiconductors and microprocessors.
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By Meghan Tribe | October 30, 2018
Founder John Pierce claims his young firm has "cracked the code of building a law firm for the digital age.”
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By Lidia Dinkova | October 30, 2018
Restaurant operator Boss Investments claims the Margaritaville company is breaking a licensing agreement by allowing a different developer to use the name in the Bahamas for a resort.
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By Martin A. Schwartz | October 30, 2018
In his Section 1983 Litigation column, Martin A. Schwartz continues his analysis of cases involving the use of Tasers. He writes: The critical Fourth Amendment issue is whether, under the totality of the circumstances facing the officer, the officer's use of her Taser was reasonable. In this column we identify the relevant circumstances in the totality of the circumstances, analyze their significance, describe discernible patterns in the decisional law, and discuss significant recent §1983 Taser decisions.
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Shipman is seeking an associate to join our Labor & Employment practice in our Hartford, New Haven, or Stamford office. Candidates shou...
Evergreen Trading is a media investment firm headquartered in NYC. We help brands achieve their goals by leveraging their unwanted assets to...
MELICK & PORTER, LLP PROMOTES CONNECTICUT PARTNERS HOLLY ROGERS, STEVEN BANKS, and ALEXANDER AHRENS