Even after making the difficult decision to blow the whistle on an employer by reporting FCA violations, a soon-to-be qui tam relator must often gather evidence to support his or her allegations.
- March 29, 2012Joel Androphy, Ashley Gargour, Sarah Frazier,and Rachel Grier
A New Jersey court recently ruled that disclosure laws trump confidentiality clauses. A look at what this means for physicians and their legal advisers in New Jersey and beyond.
March 29, 2012Janice G. InmanWhen Jewish parties who have had a religion wedding civilly divorce, can one party be compelled to grant a religious divorce? A look at recent litigation.
March 29, 2012Paul L. FeinsteinIn-depth analysis of a recent key case.
March 29, 2012ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |Recent rulings from neighboring states.
March 29, 2012ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |The Appellate Division, Second Department, has issued three decisions which held that motions to enforce a divorce agreement are not subject to the six-year statute of limitations that controls breach of contract actions.
March 29, 2012ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |The age of ESI changed everything in terms of how quickly and easily documents are created and then stored. As a consequence, every corporate defendant in a product liability case today can expect to spend thousands if not hundreds of thousands of dollars producing documents in discovery.
March 28, 2012Michael L. Junk and John McNultyThe current NLRB is beginning to issue rules and decisions more favorable to organized labor, and its field offices are issuing complaints expanding the rights of non-union workers. A look at Weingarten rights, and what they mean.
March 28, 2012John D. Shyer and Linda M. InscoeThe Fourth U.S. Court of Appeals has dismissed an employee's lawsuit, holding that the individual's inability to work overtime hours was not a substantial limitation that would entitle him to the protections of the ADA.
March 27, 2012Maria Greco Danaher

