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LJN Newsletters

  • Failure to comply with government regulations, and inactivity if a company falls out of compliance, can lead to serious product liability issues in the long term. Unfortunately, CEOs often do not consider the potential cost of product liability enforcement when they evaluate whether or not to act.

    October 29, 2010Alan Minsk and Diana Rusk Cohen
  • The availability of patent misuse as a defense in patent litigation may be substantially constrained as a result of Princo Corp. v. International Trade Commission and U.S. Philips Corp.

    October 28, 2010Charan J. Sandhu and Ausra Pumputis
  • Recent rulings of interest.

    October 28, 2010ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • A computer hard drive transformed Karen Zilkha v. David Zilkha from a messy divorce case into an insider trading investigation that led to the downfall of a major hedge fund.

    October 28, 2010Douglas S. Malan
  • In our day-to-day practice as family law practitioners, we help clients negotiate their way through the maze that is divorce. Besides the usual parenting and financial issues, some clients experience abuse at the hands of their spouse, a significant other or another household member. If this happens, the victim can obtain a Protective Order. However, as is too often seen in the newspapers, the Protective Order is merely a piece of paper and does not guarantee safety.

    October 28, 2010Karen Meislik
  • Behavioral Finance is a practical and pragmatic way of conceptualizing the social, cognitive, and emotional factors that influence financial decisions during a divorce.

    October 28, 2010Justin A. Reckers and Robert A. Simon
  • Recent rulings of interest to you and your practice.

    October 28, 2010ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • Analysis of recent key rulings.

    October 28, 2010ALM Staff | Law Journal Newsletters |
  • Over the past several years, the United Kingdom has been flexing its muscles in the global anti-corruption arena with the imposition of large penalties against companies involved in foreign-bribery offenses, focusing on individual accountability for corporate officials, close coordination with U.S. prosecutors in parallel investigations, and enforcement tools such as self-disclosures, settlements and negotiated plea agreements.

    October 28, 2010Annie Wartanian Reisinger
  • What are the implications of having child pornography on the premises? In businesses, child pornography generally is discovered by IT personnel. Or, if a corporation undergoes an unrelated internal investigation in which all computers, hard drives, e-mail servers, etc. are frozen and searched for responsive material, such a search can to lead to the discovery of child pornography stored on the corporation's server or on an individual's hard drive. What can/must/should be done as a result?

    October 28, 2010Marjorie J. Peerce and Carolyn Barth Renzin