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The complaint alleges the defendants are intentionally infringing on Subway's trademarks and operating their Sub Sub restaurant using Subway's...
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U.S. District Judge Allison D. Burroughs of the District of Massachusetts entered a default judgment in favor of Jumpsource, partially granting their...
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Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick of the Delaware Court of Chancery wrote in January that Tesla CEO Elon Musk "wields unusually expansive managerial...
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Cozen O'Connor is moving into Little Rock with the hire of a former Arkansas attorney general, while Faegre Drinker's hire arrives from Troutman...
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"This new clemency initiative is a cornerstone of our administration's efforts to make New Jersey the state of second chances," Gov. Phil Murphy said...
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Amazon cited a growing trend among attorneys to corner niche markets by suing specific corporations by gleaning inside knowledge through expansive...
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“It’s only after a year and a half of investigation, more than $1 million in attorney time, it took to develop and find the information that’s pled in our complaint, and to bring this case before this court,” Susman Godfrey partner William Merrill told the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.
“This is very much about the students not wanting their ‘home’ [the campus] actively involved with and invested in genocide,” said a Barnard College student, who will be graduating next week, adding that there have been pro-Israeli protesters on campus who have received “very little focus in mainstream media.”
Dean Omar, the Dallas-based plaintiffs firm that won a $45 million talcum powder verdict last month against Johnson & Johnson, opened on Thursday with another trial. Orrick’s Will Stute represented Johnson & Johnson.
“You’re going to still see enforcement by some states for time, space and scope-type noncompete roles,” said Gwendolyn Lindsay Coole, Wisconsin’s antitrust chief.