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  • 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. Steele
  • The 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. Stein
  • Country Artist's Bankruptcy Filing Not in Bad Faith
    Permanent Injunction Against File-Sharer Tenenbaum Is Limited, But Judge Details Criticism of Fair Use Defense

    December 21, 2009Stan Soocher
  • Vivendi Counsel on Merger Between NBCU and Comcast
    General Counsel for Live Nation Describes Team

    December 21, 2009Amanda Royal and Lisa Holton
  • Knowledge of Royalty Settlement Starts Malpractice Limitations Period

    December 21, 2009Stan Soocher
  • This 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. Friel
  • The U.S. District Court for the District of Puerto Rico ruled that statute-of-limitations tolling available for "compulsory" counterclaims didn't apply to a copyright co-ownership counterclaim that failed to arise out of the same operative facts as the plaintiff's copyright co-ownership suit. The counterclaim thus was time-barred.

    December 21, 2009Stan Soocher
  • Record 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 Soocher