The uptick in implosions of high-profile criminal cases has been cause for concern among the DOJ's most ardent supporters. Policymakers need to ask whether the DOJ is doing as much to mitigate its own risks of employee misconduct as it requires of the companies it investigates and prosecutes.
- January 26, 2010Jim Walden and Georgia Winston
This article concludes last month's article on the ability of a secured creditor to credit bid its claims at a sale under ' 363(k) or ' 1129(b)(2)(A)(ii).
January 25, 2010James H.M. Sprayregen, Christopher J. Marcus, David A. Agay and Benjamin J. SteeleThe intersection of bankruptcy and federal and state receiverships has become a fairly regular occurrence around the country. Cases from Florida, Georgia, Minnesota, New York and Oregon evidence that such incidents are taking place all across the country. There is a tension reflected in some of the cases between the primacy of the orderly and well-developed bankruptcy structure as compared with the much less structured alternative of receivership proceedings.
January 25, 2010R. Todd Neilson and Grant T. SteinKnowledge of Royalty Settlement Starts Malpractice Limitations Period
December 21, 2009Stan SoocherThis series examines changes to the Federal Trade Commission guidelines for product endorsements and testimonials. The revised new guidelines took effect Dec. 1, 2009.
December 21, 2009Alan L. FrielRecord labels fear the ticking clock that will allow recording artists to terminate post-1977 sound-recording assignments beginning in 2013. That's because '203 of the U.S. Copyright Act provides for a grantor's recapture of assigned copyrights during a five-year period beginning 35 years after publication or 40 years from the assigning of a work. The termination right applies beyond sound-recording copyrights. Pre-1978 copyright assignments may be recaptured under 17 U.S.C. '304(c) during a five-year period that begins 56 years after the copyright in an assigned work was initially procured
December 21, 2009Stan SoocherIn-house lawyers can do great good for their companies by deploying IP assets to realize direct monetary return for their companies, but they are under more pressure to reduce expenses because of the inaccurate perception that IP-related expenses do not add to the bottom line, a perception that stems from accounting conventions.
December 18, 2009Greg Lanier and Eric ChaWhen the New York Court of Appeals issued its decision in Consolidated Edison Company v. Allstate Insurance Co., the issue of allocating liability for continuing losses among multiple insurers consecutively liable for the loss appeared to be all but settled. This approach to allocation has been called into question, however, by the recent decision of the Delaware Court of Chancery in Viking Pump, Inc. v. Century Indem. Co.
December 18, 2009Robert D. Goodman and Steve VaccaroHighlights of the latest franchising cases from around the country.
December 18, 2009Charles G. Miller and Darryl A. HartWhile franchise disclosure documents and their attendant agreements are the "glue" applied to the initial franchisor/franchisee relationship, the question of "who constructed the paperwork" is both a touchy and legitimate concern for those immersed in the franchise industry.
December 18, 2009Nicholas Bibby

