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Columns & Departments

Drug & Device News Image

Drug & Device News

ljnstaff & Law Journal Newsletters

A settlement was reached Feb. 10 between McNeil Consumer Healthcare (a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson) and more than 200 plaintiffs who claim liver damage from taking Tylenol.

Columns & Departments

Case Notes Image

Case Notes

ljnstaff & Law Journal Newsletters

On April 6, Florida's Supreme Court announced that a lawsuit against R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. may go forward, rejecting the cigarette manufacturer's argument that federal preemption foreclosed the right of an injured smoker and his representatives to bring state-law tort claims against it for marketing cigarettes.

Features

Railcar Leasing on the Rise Image

Railcar Leasing on the Rise

ljnstaff & Law Journal Newsletters

According to a recent analyst report from global market research company, Technavio, the railcar leasing market in North America, is predicted to grow steadily at a Compound Annual Growth Rate of above 9% by 2021. The report, titled Railcar Leasing Market In North America 2017-2021, finds that one of the primary drivers for this market is the rise in the demand for tank cars due to growing crude oil production.

Features

What Lawyers Can Learn from Poker Players Image

What Lawyers Can Learn from Poker Players

Laura Besvinick

Litigation is often compared to chess. The image is evoked of a lawyer strategically developing evidence and making arguments the same way a chess player moves and sacrifices pieces on a chessboard, to defeat an opponent. But ask any trial lawyer, and he or she will tell you that litigation is nothing like chess. The better analogy and, more importantly, the better place to turn for useful practice pointers, is poker. Here's why.

Features

<b><i>Online Extra</b></i><br> What You Need to Know About Emoji Law (Yes, That's a Thing) Image

<b><i>Online Extra</b></i><br> What You Need to Know About Emoji Law (Yes, That's a Thing)

Ross Todd

How will the courts deal with questions of interpretation raised by emojis?

Features

Hiding Assets in California Image

Hiding Assets in California

David Goodrich

Often, asset protection advice is bereft of any discussion of California exemption statutes — which often provide the most efficient and safest asset protection. But to properly protect an asset in California, it's generally best to understand and maximize exemptions.

Features

The Dire Financial Consequences of Misclassifying Your Employees Image

The Dire Financial Consequences of Misclassifying Your Employees

Kristen D. Perkins & Jason J. Oliveri

<b><I>Looking at a Case in Florida</I></b><p>In February of this year, a Florida appeals court upheld a decision by Gov. Rick Scott's administration that Uber drivers are independent contractors and not employees. In terms of the law, the decision was hardly revolutionary. It did, however, highlight the importance of properly classifying workers. Indeed, failure to properly classify workers can have staggering financial consequences for a business that operates on a model that relies heavily on a large number of independent contractors.

Features

Second Circuit Upholds Ban on Private Investment in Law Firms Image

Second Circuit Upholds Ban on Private Investment in Law Firms

Andrew Denney & Ben Hancock

A federal appeals court in March rejected an attempt to loosen restrictions on private investment in the legal industry. The decision, which affirms a 2015 district court ruling, is a blow to Los Angeles-based personal injury firm Jacoby & Meyers, which has fought a nearly six-year legal battle against the prohibition on non-lawyers investing in law firms and sharing in legal fees.

Features

Five Secrets to Drafting an Effective Default Lease Image

Five Secrets to Drafting an Effective Default Lease

Adam Leitman Bailey & John M. Desiderio

<b><I>Part One of a Two-Part Article</I></b><p>This article contains some of the lesser-known, creative clauses used to ensure either payment of rent and compliance, or a swift eviction of the commercial tenant. They are what the authors call "tools of the effective default clause."

Features

Corporate FCPA Enforcement in the Era of Trump Image

Corporate FCPA Enforcement in the Era of Trump

Robert J. Anello & Peter Janowski

<b><I>Part Two of a Two-Part Article </I></b><p> As the penalties being extracted by the United States from multinational corporations for violations of anti-corruption statutes have skyrocketed in recent years, an increasing number of other countries have begun to pass or enhance their own laws prohibiting, among other things, bribery of foreign officials, and have increased the financial penalties applicable to businesses that violate those laws.

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