'My Therapist Told Me ...'
Therapists who treat your client can be meddlesome third wheels or enormous helps in divorce litigation. Dealing with them effectively can improve attorney-client relations and spare everyone considerable misery.
Features
2004 Update: Negative Custody Evaluations and Guardian Ad Litem Reports
In the August 2003 issue of The Matrimonial Strategist, I discussed identifying and exacting information from your client that would motivate a Guardian Ad Litem (GAL) or Custody Evaluator (CE) to examine the real issues in the case and not let bias interfere with his or her assessment. (In the remainder of this article, the GAL/CE is designated female and the client male.) The article made suggestions about interviewing your client, identifying issues, and reviewing records such as those from previous court matters or medical treatment.
Features
Pop-Up Ads Enjoined in Trademark Suit
A Manhattan federal judge recently enjoined an Internet advertiser from delivering "pop-up" ads to visitors of a retail Web site.
Trademark Exploitation on the Internet: Don't Be Branded a Usurper
While the Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act adequately addresses the legal difficulties associated with bad-faith registration of trademarked names by nontrademark holders, e-exploitation of trademarks is still a problem for trademark holders.
e-Commerce Docket Sheet
Recent court rulings in e-commerce.
New Turf to Surf: A Roundup of Useful Legal Web Sites
A wealth of Web sites of interest to legal professionals who advise e-commerce ventures awaits digging into on the Internet. A list of a few that are worth a look follows.
Avoid These Mistakes in Your Company's Employee Handbook
Employee handbooks continue to provide disgruntled employees with ammunition for lawsuits for breach of contract, violations of statutes and opportunities to recover punitive damages on discrimination claims. This article identifies mistakes commonly made by employers and discusses methods for eliminating those deficiencies.
Features
New European Law on 'Works Councils' Demands HQ Strategy
A new European Union law coming online next year will force multinationals operating in Europe to set up in-house, shop-level worker groups that, to an American, look a lot like independent unions. The new law threatens to tie a multinational's hands whenever it decides, in the future, to change anything in its European operations. The good news is that the new law offers substantial freedom to structure worker groups in as business-friendly a way as you want. The catch: You can't delegate the "works councils" problem down to your local European HR, and you have to implement your headquarters-driven strategy this year, during a special window period. This article summarizes the new law, and then explains the "best practices" strategy of creating a works councils network template that takes advantage of the law's window-period that grandfathers-in works councils structured before tough regulations get issued later.
Features
Pens in the Board Room
But these are my personal notes ...." Virtually every litigator has heard this plea from an executive responding to discovery. It is an almost reflexive reaction stemming from the popular myth that "personal" somehow equals "protected," and often comes from the most sophisticated of corporate directors and high-level management. Too often lawyers hear executives boast about their note-taking prowess while pointing to rows and rows of historical notebooks that they assembled over the years. Many executives learn too late that very little of their "personal" board meeting notes are privileged, and the privilege that might attach to some portions does not even belong to them. More and more frequently in this post-Enron environment, privileged materials are being disclosed by the owner of the privilege ' the corporation ' due to stricter standards for company cooperation in government investigations, particularly in civil investigations by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and criminal inquiries by the U.S. Department of Justice.
Features
Hotline
Recent developments of interest to corporate counsel.
Need Help?
- Prefer an IP authenticated environment? Request a transition or call 800-756-8993.
- Need other assistance? email Customer Service or call 1-877-256-2472.
MOST POPULAR STORIES
- Judge Rules Shaquille O'Neal Will Face Securities Lawsuit for Promotion, Sale of NFTsA federal district court in Miami, FL, has ruled that former National Basketball Association star Shaquille O'Neal will have to face a lawsuit over his promotion of unregistered securities in the form of cryptocurrency tokens and that he was a "seller" of these unregistered securities.Read More ›
- Compliance Officers and Law Enforcement: Friends or Foes?<b><i>Part Two of a Two-Part Article</b></i><p>As we saw in Part One, regulators have recently shown a tendency to focus on compliance officers who they deem to have failed to ensure that the compliance and anti-money laundering (AML) programs that they oversee adequately prevented corporate wrongdoing, and there are several indications that regulators will continue to target compliance officers in 2018 in actions focused on Bank Secrecy Act/AML compliance.Read More ›
- Bankruptcy Sales: Finding a Diamond In the RoughThere is no efficient market for the sale of bankruptcy assets. Inefficient markets yield a transactional drag, potentially dampening the ability of debtors and trustees to maximize value for creditors. This article identifies ways in which investors may more easily discover bankruptcy asset sales.Read More ›
- Structuring Strategies for Off-Balance-Sheet Treatment of Real Property LeasesThe Financial Accounting Standards Board released a new set of lease accounting standards, ASC 842, which went into effect earlier this year. Most significantly, publicly traded companies are now obligated to list all leases of 12 months or longer on their balance sheets as both assets and liabilities. Large private companies will follow suit in 2020.Read More ›
- Removing Restrictive Covenants In New YorkIn Rockwell v. Despart, the New York Supreme Court, Third Department, recently revisited a recurring question: When may a landowner seek judicial removal of a covenant restricting use of her land?Read More ›