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U.S. Supreme Court Addresses the 'Denominator Problem' Image

U.S. Supreme Court Addresses the 'Denominator Problem'

Stewart E. Sterk

In a recent case, the U.S. Supreme Court applied what has come to be known as the <i>Penn Central</i> balancing test to uphold New York City's refusal to approve an office tower atop Grand Central Terminal.

Features

Recent Rulings on California Anti-SLAPP Motions By Entertainment Attorneys Image

Recent Rulings on California Anti-SLAPP Motions By Entertainment Attorneys

Stan Soocher

Defendants in entertainment industry cases often invoke California's "anti-SLAPP" statute, Calif. Civ. Code §425.16, which is meant to bar lawsuits filed to muffle free speech activities or a legal right to petition. This summer, some noteworthy court decisions have come out of California that involved anti-SLAPP motions filed by attorneys who are defendants themselves in entertainment litigations.

Columns & Departments

Cooperatives & Condominiums Image

Cooperatives & Condominiums

ljnstaff

Discussion of two key rulings.

Features

What Will Impact Be of Supreme Court's <i>Tam</i> Decision? Image

What Will Impact Be of Supreme Court's <i>Tam</i> Decision?

Theodore H. Davis Jr. & Samuel T. Kilb

In <i>Matal v. Tam</i>, the trademark case involving the name of the Asian-American rock band The Slants, the SCOTUS held that the portion of §2(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. §1052(a), that prohibits the federal registration of potentially disparaging trademarks and service marks, violated the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment.

Features

A Broadening Consensus to Narrow Asset Forfeiture Image

A Broadening Consensus to Narrow Asset Forfeiture

Edmund W. Searby

The Supreme Court as a whole appears aligned and motivated to review critically federal and state asset forfeiture procedures. In addition, Attorney General Sessions last month restored the federal forfeiture of property seized by state and local law enforcement ("federal adoptions"), but with certain additional safeguards.

Features

Bringing <i>Falsettos</i> Musical from Stage To Movie Screens Image

Bringing <i>Falsettos</i> Musical from Stage To Movie Screens

Stephanie Forshee

During this year's annual Tony awards recognizing Broadway theater, Whoopi Goldberg took to the stage to announce that the musical revival of Falsettos would be hitting movie theaters nationwide in July. Falsettos, which played at Lincoln Center Theater in New York, was nominated for five Tonys, but a deal had been negotiated long before the June 11 awards broadcast to make the stage production into a piece of event cinema.

Columns & Departments

Development Image

Development

ljnstaff

A look at several rulings, including an article 78 proceeding challenging grant of an area variance to proposed operators of a religious school.

Features

<i>Matal v. Tam</i> and Viewpoint-Discriminatory Prohibitions Against Federal Registration Image

<i>Matal v. Tam</i> and Viewpoint-Discriminatory Prohibitions Against Federal Registration

Theodore H. Davis Jr. & Samuel T. Kilb

In <i>Matal v. Tam,</i> the SCOTUS held that a portion of Section 2(a) of the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. §1052(a), prohibiting the federal registration of potentially disparaging trademarks and service marks, violated the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment.

Features

Reflections on <b><I>Kokesh v. SEC</I></b> Image

Reflections on <b><I>Kokesh v. SEC</I></b>

Dixie L. Johnson & M. Alexander Koch

<b><I>Potential Ramifications of SEC Disgorgement Being a Penalty</b></i><p> <b><i>Part One of a Two-Part Article</I></b><p>In reference to <I>Kokesh</I>, most commentators have focused on the five-year limitations period, which certainly carries important ramifications for the SEC. But as we describe here, the Supreme Court's ruling that "SEC disgorgement constitutes a penalty" has more far-reaching ramifications.

Features

Serving Two Masters: When 'Bankruptcy-Remote' Meets Public Policy Image

Serving Two Masters: When 'Bankruptcy-Remote' Meets Public Policy

Pamela J. Martinson

Structured financing transactions make extensive use of entities formed for the specific purpose of reducing the likelihood that assets will be involved in a potential bankruptcy proceeding. Known as "bankruptcy-remote entities," or "BREs," these entities are subject to structures and covenants in financing documents and their own formation documents, which are designed to reduce the likelihood that the BRE will file for bankruptcy protection.

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