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Features

Challenging Disproportionate Forfeitures Image

Challenging Disproportionate Forfeitures

Harry Sandick, Daniel Ruzumna & Jacqueline Bonneau

<b><i>Part One of a Two-Part Article</b></i><p>In <i>Honeycutt v. United States</i>, the Supreme Court rejected the argument that a federal criminal forfeiture statute permits joint and several liability for criminal asset forfeiture judgments, thereby protecting defendants who were only marginally culpable for a larger offense.

Features

How Law Firms Can Prepare for FinTech Wave Image

How Law Firms Can Prepare for FinTech Wave

Keith Fall & Taylor Miller 

<i><b>The Innovations and Industry Disruption Should Have Law Firms Snapping to Attention</b></i><p>The world of financial services is being upended by new technologies — from virtual currencies and blockchain to peer-to-peer lending and enhanced mobile banking — that are capturing customers, as well as the attention of Wall Street investors and industry regulators.

Features

Co-Writer Files Royalties Suit Against Iglesias Image

Co-Writer Files Royalties Suit Against Iglesias

Samantha Joseph

The title of Julio Iglesias's hit song “Me Olvide de Vivir” translates to “I Had Forgotten to Live.” But a Miami songwriter's copyright infringement lawsuit suggests the only thing the famed crooner “forgot” was to pay his collaborator.

Columns & Departments

Real Property Law Image

Real Property Law

ssalkin

Broker Agreed to Commission Based on Rent for First Five Years of Lease<br>Statements in Earlier Action Did Not Accelerate Mortgage and Trigger Statute of Limitations<br>Death Does Not Extend Foreclosure Limitations Period<br>Neighbor Granted Statutory Licence to Paint Fence<br>Record Did Not Establish Conveyance of Easement<br>Co-Tenant Entitled to Partition

Features

Supreme Court Eyes Relaxing Rule on Foreign Patent Damages Image

Supreme Court Eyes Relaxing Rule on Foreign Patent Damages

Scott Graham

<b><i>Despite Possibility of 'Chaos,' Presumption Against Extraterritorial Application May Give Way to Simple Proximate Cause Test, Justices Suggest</b></i><p>The U.S. Supreme Court seemed to be mulling a flexible test for foreign patent damages last month, with the categorical presumption against extraterritoriality taking a back seat.

Features

'Media & Communication:' Is Your Firm Ready for PR? Image

'Media & Communication:' Is Your Firm Ready for PR?

Carlos Arcos

A good PR strategy might involve working on content creation, managing social media accounts, interacting with customers online and offline, and talking to the press.

Features

You're Going to Need a Bigger Boat Image

You're Going to Need a Bigger Boat

Mark Sangster

<b><i>Small Law Firms Face Large Regulatory Requirements</b></i><p>Unlike large firms with comparable resources with which to protect client non-public information, small firms can find themselves trapped between cyberattacks, like ransomware, that don't prejudice based on the size of firm, and regulators who are indifferent to your size, when investigating a potential violation.

Features

The Growing Risk of Providing Oral Summaries Image

The Growing Risk of Providing Oral Summaries

Marjorie J. Peerce & Brad Gershel

<b><i>Preserving Privilege in the Wake of SEC v. Herrera and the Government's Increasing Leverage to Obtain Such Disclosures</b></i><p>A Magistrate Judge of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida held that an “oral download” of outside counsel's interview notes to the SEC resulted in a limited waiver of protection under the attorney work-product doctrine over the underlying interview notes and memoranda. The decision is a significant one, and underscores one of the core challenges facing companies seeking to cooperate with the government during the course of its investigations.

Columns & Departments

Development Image

Development

ssalkin

Town Entitled To Injunctive Relief for Violation of Certificate of Occupancy

Features

Founders of Cryptocurrency-Focused Tech Company Face Federal Fraud Charges Image

Founders of Cryptocurrency-Focused Tech Company Face Federal Fraud Charges

Colby Hamilton

Two heads of a tech company that raised tens of millions through an initial coin offering for what was sold as the world's first multi-blockchain debit card now face federal civil and criminal charges for allegedly defrauding investors.

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