‘Retaliatory Amendment’ of an LLC Operating Agreement

Like all contracts, operating agreements — which are celebrated for allowing business partners to freely define their relationship by contract — can be amended and modified, according to a post in The LLC Jungle.

Author Kevin Brodehl discusses a recent opinion from the Supreme Court of New York that illustrates how the process of amending an LLC’s operating agreement can sometimes be used to gain the upper hand in a dispute between members.

The case involves a majority of members amending the operating agreement to remove the manager and escalate capital calls.

Read the article.

 

 




China Employment Contract FAQs

ChinaThe end of the year brings an onslaught of China Employer Audits, and with those audits comes an onslaught of China employment law questions, writes Grace Yang in the Harris Bricken China Law Blog.

She discusses some of the most commonly asked questions on China employment contracts and provides short answers to each of them.

The issues include using an English version of contracts, contract templates provided by Chinese labor authorities, termination of signed China employment contracts, open-term contracts, offer letters, and the need to review contract templates.

Read the article.

 

 




Contract ‘Busts’: Trying to Decipher Provisions That Literally Make No Sense

In an ABA Journal column, Bryan Garner explores the curiosity of “busts”—the prevalence of contractual provisions, sometimes perpetuated in deal after deal, that make no literal sense at all.

“That they exist at all is something of a marvel. After all, you’d think that transactional lawyers would adopt a protocol of reading and rereading each contract that goes out the door,” he writes. “Given that critical thinking and close reading are prized habits for lawyers, contradictory or outright nonsensical provisions should be exceedingly rare. Alas, they’re not.”

Garner discusses the dangers of flawed forms and word swaps, such as mixing up “lessor” and “lessee.”

Read the article.

 

 




Supply Chain News: Getting Outsourcing Contracts Right

When contracting with outsourcing firms, there is often a lot of dissatisfaction with the outcomes, says Kate Vitasek, a consultant and University of Tennessee faculty member. And that is because companies don’t get the contracting part correct.

She is quoted in a report in the Supply Chain Digest.

Vitasek says she and other researchers at the University of Tennessee have uncovered a better, more user-friendly way of getting to a sound sourcing agreement,” according to the report. “That insight came after studying some of the most successful outsourcing agreements from such companies as Procter & Gamble, Microsoft and McDonald’s, in research funded by the US Air Force that lasted almost a decade.”

The article lists five rules for successful outsourcing contracts.

Read the article.

 

 

 




Steven Pflaum Honored by the Illinois Judges Association

Steven Pflaum, a Neal Gerber Eisenberg partner and co-chair of the firm’s litigation department, was honored by the Illinois Judges Association (IJA) at its annual luncheon on Dec. 7, 2018, for his service on the Illinois Judicial Ethics Committee. The event also honored retired Illinois Supreme Court Justice Charles Freeman and outgoing Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan.

“I am heartened by the IJA’s recognition that our partners continue to guide the legal profession on integrity, ethics, and service,” said Scott J. Fisher, the firm’s managing partner. “One of our founders, the late Phil C. Neal, set a shining example for us all, and I am certain that Phil would share our collective pride that Steve has been recognized for his dedicated and enduring work with an organization that he has been a member of since its founding.”

The Illinois Judicial Ethics Committee is a joint committee of the IJA, Chicago Bar Association, and Illinois State Bar Association that provides guidance to judges regarding their responsibilities under the Illinois Code of Judicial Conduct and recommends revisions to the Code to the Illinois Supreme Court. Steve has served as a member of the group since its founding in 1992 and has served as the chair since 2013.

“Steve Pflaum’s dedication to helping judges learn about ethics is an extraordinary contribution to the legal community,” said James E. Snyder, president of the Illinois Judges Association and an associate judge of the Cook County Circuit Court. “His hard work helps us all do better.”

The IJA consists of more than 1,250 current and retired judges and supports judicial excellence and professional development and judicial education, fosters public confidence in an independent judiciary, works to preserve the independence of the judiciary by educating the public and students, and promotes a diverse judiciary that administers justice in a fair and impartial court system.

 

 




Winston Announces 21 Newly Elected Partners

Winston & Strawn announced that 21 attorneys have been elected to partner. Spanning five practice areas and nine offices, the following attorneys were promoted:

• Scott Ahmad (Chicago) is a litigator and trial attorney who devotes a significant part of his practice to defending companies in the medical device/pharmaceutical, food, dietary supplement, and technology industries.

• Brian Bailey (Charlotte) represents lending institutions in connection with loans to finance retail, hotel, office, condominium, and multifamily properties.

• Nolan Bolduc (Chicago) has a wide range of experience in corporate finance matters, including corporate lending, structured finance, and debt capital markets transactions.

• Ilya Bubel (New York) focuses his practice on M&A and other complex business transactions on behalf of private equity sponsors and other financial investors, as well as public and private companies across various industries.

• Katrina Eash (Dallas) is a trial lawyer who concentrates her practice in complex commercial and intellectual property litigation. She also has experience in high-risk employment litigation.

• Christine Kolosov (Los Angeles) concentrates her practice in the development, financing, and sales of renewable energy projects and in the representation of water utilities and other companies in regulatory proceedings before the California Public Utilities Commission.

• Maria Kostytska (Paris) is an international arbitrator and litigator who regularly serves as lead counsel to sovereign states, private companies, and individuals across a variety of industrial sectors.

• Rex Mann (Dallas) is a trial lawyer who focuses his practice on complex civil litigation concerning commercial and intellectual property matters. He often works with companies in the technology sector or matters involving complex technology, as he adds additional value through his background in engineering and understanding of the technical issues in the matters.

• Shannon Murphy (Chicago) is a member of the firm’s White Collar, Regulatory Defense, and Investigations group as well as the firm’s Global Privacy and Data Security Task Force and focuses her practice on internal investigations, data protection counseling, and complex litigation, particularly matters involving potential criminal liability or trade secret issues.

• Alex Niebruegge (Houston) concentrates his practice on energy sector transactions, mergers and acquisitions, private equity, and other corporate matters.

• Brian Nisbet (Chicago) focuses his practice on patent litigation, in both the pharmaceutical and telecommunications industries, complex commercial litigation, and class action defense in cases alleging design defect and consumer fraud.

• Jason Parker (London) is a project development attorney advising clients on energy and infrastructure projects that are large-scale, complex, and highly technical.

• Conor Reidy (Chicago) concentrates his practice on complex commercial litigation, antitrust merger review, and antitrust counseling.

• Eimeric Reig-Plessis (San Francisco) is a patent litigator with significant experience in Hatch-Waxman litigation, Federal Circuit appeals, and inter partes reviews.

• Justin Reinus (Dallas and Los Angeles) advises on initial public offerings and other equity offerings, high yield and investment-grade debt offerings, and spin-offs. He also advises clients on day-to-day securities disclosure and corporate governance matters.

• Jennifer Stadler (New York) advises public and private companies, private equity clients, and fiduciaries on employee benefits and executive compensation matters.

• Matthew Stark (New York) focuses his practice on complex commercial litigation, predominantly in the areas of class actions and insurance. He also has experience litigating disputes in the areas of antitrust, consumer fraud, and sports and entertainment.

• Courtney Tygesson (Chicago) concentrates her practice in capital markets transactions, mergers and acquisitions, and corporate governance matters. She has experience representing both issuers and underwriters in debt and equity offerings, including IPOs and offerings of high-yield securities.

• Ryan Walden (New York) represents private equity funds and their portfolio companies throughout the life cycle of an investment, from the initial acquisition and debt financing through the ultimate sale. He also works with entrepreneurs and their companies on day-to-day corporate counseling, equity and debt financing, and sale transactions.

• Thomas Weber (Chicago) concentrates his litigation and trial practice on complex commercial disputes. He has experience handling breach of contract, fraud, post-closing M&A, securities, and insurance matters.

• Owen Zingraff (Charlotte) represents borrowers and lenders in connection with syndicated and bilateral credit facilities, including asset‐backed, term and revolving, and acquisition facilities. He also has experience with a variety of M&A, fund formation, and other corporate transactions.

Winston & Strawn LLP is an international law firm with 16 offices located throughout North America, Asia, and Europe.

 

 




Former Swissmedic Head of Legal Affairs to Join Sidley in Switzerland

Andreas Balsiger Betts, the former Head of Legal Affairs at Swissmedic, will join Sidley Austin LLP as a senior advisor in Switzerland. The firm also announced that Olivier Goarnisson, the former Director of Medical Affairs Operations Europe and a lawyer at a global pharmaceutical company, has joined the life sciences practice in Switzerland as counsel.

Ina release, the firm said Andreas Balsiger Betts previously served as the head of Legal Affairs and member of the Management Board of Swissmedic, the Swiss Agency for Therapeutic Products. In this capacity, he had a role in drafting the complete revision of the Swiss Federal Act on Therapeutic Products and its ordinances, which will come into force in 2019. He represented Swissmedic in all the Swiss parliamentary committee meetings in this context as well as in all meetings with EU member state agency counterparts. At Sidley, he will advise on regulatory matters in the life sciences industry.

The firm said Olivier Goarnisson possesses dual qualification as a lawyer and medical doctor, and will focus his practice on matters related to clinical trials, non-interventional studies, pharmacovigilance, marketing authorizations, market access, data protection, and compliance and enforcement.

“Andreas’s arrival initiates our effort to provide the first comprehensive global life sciences legal practice in Switzerland, offering a deep, three-continent perspective to established global companies, to the emerging biotechnology sector, and to the many global life sciences companies that call Switzerland home,” said Scott Bass, leader of Sidley’s global Life Sciences practice. “Andreas is highly recognized in the Swiss life sciences industry for his in-depth knowledge of the regulatory environment. His insights into Swiss institutions will significantly bolster our ability to offer global solutions to local challenges for clients in the life sciences sector. We are very happy that Olivier also joins our firm, bringing his experience in a wide range of matters related to life sciences regulatory law, specifically in the pharmaceutical industry.”

In his role as head of Legal Affairs and Member of the Management Board of Swissmedic, Andreas Balsiger Betts was in charge of establishing and maintaining legal guidance for Swissmedic’s policies, procedures and practice, both on the strategic and the day-to-day level. With his division of specialized prosecutors, he also was responsible for law enforcement initiatives within the remit of Swissmedic. Under his guidance, his team represented Swissmedic in all court cases regarding administrative and penal decisions taken by the agency, against claims of liability and in freedom of information inquiries.

Olivier Goarnisson oversaw his company’s execution of post-authorization studies and related interactions with regulatory authorities. He also oversaw programs through which the company provided support for academic research in Europe. In this role, he ensured compliance of the company’s academic support programs with anti-corruption and pharmacovigilance requirements. He also helped the company manage intellectual property and product liability risks that may arise from involvement in academic research. Before moving in-house, he worked for six years as a lawyer in Sidley’s Brussels office, where he worked on regulatory law, clinical trials, pharmacovigilance and data protection issues affecting clients in the life sciences industry.

 

 




Austin Holland Joins Bradley’s Nashville Office as Associate

Austin W. Holland has joined Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP’s Nashville office as an associate in the Litigation Practice Group, focusing on financial services.

“It is a pleasure to welcome Austin to our Nashville office,” said Bradley Nashville Office Managing Partner Lela Hollabaugh. “Austin’s background and experience make him a great addition to our already deep bench of litigators and other Banking and Financial Services Practice Group attorneys who service a broad range of banks, lenders and financial services institutions.”

In a release, the firm said Bradley represents six of the 10 largest banks and 16 of the 20 largest mortgage servicers in the United States. Many of the firm’s attorneys also serve in leadership roles with various prominent financial services trade organizations including the ACMA, MBA, ACCFSL, AFSA, and AllRegs.

Prior to joining Bradley, Holland worked for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in the Office of Litigation, where he handled matters related to reverse mortgages, bankruptcy, foreclosures, grant recaptures, withdrawals of SAFMR and AFFH rules, religious discrimination, and the Appointments Clause of the U.S. Constitution.

Holland clerked in the Office of the District Attorney in Nashville and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Tennessee.

Holland received his J.D. from Vanderbilt University Law School and his Bachelor of Business Administration from Southwestern Oklahoma State University.

 

 




Perkins Coie Moves San Diego Office

Perkins Coie has announced that its San Diego office will relocate on Dec. 10, 2018 to 11452 El Camino Real, Suite 300. The firm’s new 37,000-square-foot space will accommodate the office’s recent and planned growth in its existing and additional practice areas, the firm said in a release.

The release also said that Perkins Coie established an office in San Diego in June 2010 to serve the intellectual property needs of national and international clients with business in Southern California and support the firm’s growth strategy on the West Coast. The office quickly expanded to provide a full range of legal services. The firm’s other West Coast offices are located in Los Angeles, Palo Alto, San Francisco, Portland, Seattle, and Bellevue, WA.

“Our firm is proud to have had a presence in San Diego for more than eight years, and we look forward to continuing to serve clients in the region and maintaining our presence within the business community for years to come,” said Matthew Bernstein, Managing Partner of Perkins Coie’s San Diego office. “Our new space will enable us to continue with our planned attorney growth and will increase our presence in the San Diego community.”

 

 




Lando & Anastasi, LLP Announces Strategic Expansion with New Hires

Lando & Anastasi, LLP of Cambridge, Mass., announced the expansion of its professional team with the addition of five technology specialists in recent months.

Lachlan M. Blair, Ph.D. has joined L&A’s life sciences practice; Wilhelm E. Liano has joined the chemical and material sciences practice; and Mohamed J. Alghanami, Stephen W. Kerr, and Arash Sayyah, Ph.D. have all joined the firm’s computer technology & software and electronics practices.

 

 




Tesla Replaces General Counsel With Seasoned Beltway Trial Lawyer

Tesla announced on Friday that General Counsel Todd Maron is leaving the electric vehicle maker, the second high-ranking attorney to do so this quarter.

CNBC reports that the move comes a month after Phil Rothenberg left his post as Tesla’s vice president of legal to become general counsel at Sonder, a hospitality start-up.

CNBC’s Lora Kolodny reports:

“The electric car company said it plans to replace Maron with seasoned Beltway trial lawyer Dane Butswinkas, a chairman at Williams & Connolly, who was also a Co-Chair in the firm’s Commercial Litigation, Financial Services and Banking Groups.”

Read the CNBC article.

 

 

 




Arbitrator’s Undisclosed Relationships Sink Oil and Gas Awards

An arbitrator’s failure to disclose his longstanding business relationships with one of the parties requires setting aside the arbitration awards, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas ruled, according to Bloomberg Law.

Reporter Brian Flood writes that Patrick Long, part of a three-member arbitration team, heard a contractual dispute over joint oil and gas operations between OOGC America LLC and Chesapeake Exploration LLC. But the court found that Long lied when he “claimed that he did not have professional or social connections with the parties or witnesses.”

“In reality, Long was a long-time business partner of Yong Siang Goh, the board chairman of FTS International Inc., an affiliate of Chesapeake Exploration,” Flood writes. “In addition, Long failed to disclose that he had represented FTS as a lawyer, that FTS’s deputy general counsel was a former partner at his law firm, and that his law firm had employed Goh’s daughter.”

The court vacated the awards.

Read the Bloomberg Law article.

 

 




Judge Tosses Sexual Assault Suit Against Lawyer in Battle Between Personal Injury Titans

The ABA Journal is reporting that a Michigan judge has dismissed a sexual misconduct suit against a Southfield lawyer in what appears to be an ongoing battle between rivals.

The judge dismissed the sexual assault suit against lawyer Michael Morse after finding that his accuser had lied when she was questioned in a deposition about a possible financial motive for the suit.

The Journal‘s report describes the defendant and the lawyer opposing him:

“Morse has built his practice with daytime television commercials that are ‘as ubiquitous as soap operas,’ according to the Detroit News. His mother appears in some of the ads, and he comes across as a likable lawyer. [The accuser’s lawyer, Geoffrey] Fieger, on the other hand, ‘has handled a bevy of prominent cases,’ including that of assisted-suicide advocate Dr. Jack Kevorkian. He doesn’t seem to care what people think, and he is full of ‘bombastic bravado,’ according to the Detroit News.

Read the ABA Journal article.

 

 




Download: 5 Future Tech Forces & Board Expectations

A new publication by the National Association of Corporate Directors examines the areas of technology that are “fundamentally changing the economic world.”

The article can be downloaded from the NACD’s website at no charge.

The areas discussed in the article include artificial intelligence, blockchain, cybersecurity, hyperconnectivity, and symbiotic systems.

J.T. Kostman, the author of the article and managing director of Applied Artificial Intelligence at Grant Thornton, provides real-world examples that illustrate the capabilities these technologies have enabled, the risks they pose, and why they are considered to be the driving forces of “the fourth industrial revolution.”

Download the article.

 

 




The Rise of Analytics: How Legal Technology Finally Got a Seat in the Boardroom

By David Carns
Chief Strategy Officer of Casepoint

The story of legal technology over the past 30 years is by and large a story of tremendous progress. During that period there have been near-continual improvements, enabling significant gains in speed and efficiency, and lowering the headcount in many legal departments. But until recently the impact of these improvements has been felt primarily in the legal department itself. For the most part, legal continued to be perceived as just another department within the corporate structure, and rarely a strategic driver in the organization.

But recent advances in legal technology – in particular artificial intelligence technologies like analytics, predictive modeling and machine learning – are giving legal more prominence within the corporation and are helping make the department’s strategic value more tangible to the C-suite and the board. Let’s explore how these advanced analytic technologies are currently helping corporate legal departments elevate their standing and demonstrate they are at least as valuable as other corporate business units in managing profit and loss and informing strategic business decisions.

Yesterday’s technology creates new efficiencies, but is that enough?

Legal technology made significant improvements from the 1990s through 2010s by leveraging innovations like word processing, hard copy document scanning, electronic time capture, e-billing, and a broad range of e-discovery technologies, including web-based review and technology assisted review (TAR). The result of incorporating these and other innovations has been a much higher level of efficiency in legal departments.

In light of the paper-based alternatives of the 90s and earlier, the new efficiencies were dramatic. Word processing alone meant that fewer people were required to create memos, briefs, complaints, contracts and the like, and the addition of scanning and electronic time capture made possible huge gains in productivity for attorneys and legal staff. Even as technology opened the doors to exponential increases in data volume, e-discovery applications, web-based review and eventually TAR enabled case teams to pore through millions of digital pages with greater speed than it took to read thousands of physical pages just a few years earlier.

These were significant improvements, but for the most part they did not – and still fail to – resonate in the corporate boardroom. Why? Because legal departments remained predominantly reactionary rather than proactive. While these powerful new technologies allowed legal to manage current challenges with greater ease and with fewer employees, they did little to allow GCs to get ahead of future challenges. But that’s begun to change.

Today’s technologies provide unprecedented insight into current, and future, matters

More recent developments in legal technology – incorporating broader innovations like SaaS and cloud-computing, as well as machine learning, predictive modeling, data analysis and data visualization – are finally allowing legal departments to demonstrate proactive and strategic value to the board. The recent embrace of these innovations by general counsels and legal executives are part of a large trend in which the legal department is exerting much tighter control over eDiscovery technology. That’s happening because GCs understand it’s one of their best avenues to controlling costs. More importantly, the trend is providing the GC and other executives with the metrics they need to understand the precise relationships between cost and performance – not just in eDiscovery, but across the litigation lifecycle.

The power of analytics across multiple matters

These new technologies are realizing their fullest potential in multi-matter analytics and data reuse, in which information about data gleaned from one legal matter is leveraged and applied to the data in subsequent matters, and where analytic processes are tightly integrated across the entire litigation workflow. When advanced analytical technology is integrated across multiple legal matters, the legal department can identify key metrics to understand important trends outside the silo of individual matters. This is precisely where legal begins to transcend its traditional status and function in the organization and become a proactive participant in business strategy.

Machine learning, a key component of analytics, is all about continuous improvement. Machine learning algorithms are built to quickly detect patterns in large bodies of data. By repeatedly and iteratively generalizing from very specific examples, these algorithms steadily refine our understanding of the data and, as they are progressively exposed to even larger volumes of comparable data, are able to make increasingly accurate predictions about the kind of information a new body of data is likely to contain.

For instance, legal now has access to tools that can help them make accurate projections about important factors in eDiscovery like data volume, the number of individual documents, the document types, the number of custodians and the number of reviewers a particular matter is likely to involve. The same tools enable us to quickly make facts-based determinations on questions like these: Which outside counsel is making the most efficient and cost-effective use of technology? Which is likely to perform best on a particular kind of matter? Which reviewers were most effective and productive in Matter A? Which reviewers are likely to do the best job at the lowest cost on Matters B and C?

Analytic technology applied to a single matter – say, predictive coding to speed the review process – can be achieve big cost savings even in that comparatively narrow context, but the technology is especially powerful when you use it to leverage information from one litigated matter and apply that knowledge to additional matters.

For example, privileged documents from Matter A are highly likely to be privileged documents in Matter B. Finding those documents the first time around can be expensive and time-consuming – especially if you are relying on keyword searching – but machine learning can make that process many times faster and more accurate when you are leveraging a larger body of information from previous matters.

Similarly, “hot” documents in one matter are often likely to be informative across multiple matters. The sooner we identify such documents in the litigation lifecycle, the earlier we are able to make important decisions about whether to negotiate or proceed to trial, or about legal strategy – and, of course, this has the potential to save lots of money. The same dynamic applies to information about internal investigations: Analytics can help us quickly identify internal code words or project names tagged in previous investigations and predict their relevance to subsequent investigations. We can even use these metrics and processes to inform multiple matters simultaneously in real time. Suggested tagging from one matter can be applied to speed review in another matter being litigated at the same time.

Data-based portfolio management reduces costs across the board

When you consider the application of analytics across multiple matters, the result is something GCs haven’t had before: true portfolio management with a comprehensive view of costs, efficiencies and trends across all matters. You even have the components of high-level SWOT analysis right at your fingertips. As I’ve already suggested, this is the kind of information that earns legal a seat in the boardroom. Advanced analytics enables comprehensive, effective multi-matter management that will lead to reduced legal costs associated with litigation and reduced risk by improving legal outcomes.

Litigation cost forecasting based on multi-matter analytics is now possible and, properly applied, is much more accurate than less sophisticated forecasting methodologies. And the benefits can extend to other functions in the organization. For example, when the legal department successfully deploys analytics to overhaul its portfolio management processes, that deployment can serve as a model for corporate IT deployment in other departments and inform the organization at large about optimal technology strategies.

Does this kind of potential excite you? It should. Even if your organization chooses not to bring an advanced eDiscovery platform in-house, you should be demanding metrics from outside counsel and/or third-party vendors that can help you determine which outside counsel makes the most effective use of technology and which review teams are most cost-effective and achieve the best outcomes. Does your outside counsel take advantage of analytic tools like document classifiers, predictive coding, TAR 2.0 and advanced data modeling? If you don’t know, you should ask, and you should ask to see the data.

Analytics technology is no longer speculative in the legal domain. It is being used to great advantage in forward-looking law departments and firms right now. Technology platforms are being designed and developed specifically to accommodate a more rigorously proactive mindset in the legal department. These platforms not only incorporate advance technologies, but are also built for maximum extensibility and flexibility so they can be easily and rapidly customized and readily integrate new applications. There is little doubt they can efficiently automate the full spectrum of eDiscovery phases, but they are also giving legal departments a more holistic and data-driven view of the entire litigation process and providing the basis for strategic decision-making. That’s certainly good for legal, but it’s also good for the entire organization.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

David Carns is the Chief Strategy Officer of Casepoint LLC. He joined Casepoint as a Director of Client Services in 2010, rose the ranks to Executive Vice President until his most recent promotion in 2017. In addition to being a recovering attorney, Carns possesses a lifelong passion for technology and its advancements. His career has always found him at the intersection of technology and the legal field given his intimate knowledge of both.

Prior to joining Casepoint, Carns’ positions included Director of Practice Technology at a premier global law firm, Technology Consultant, and Director of Technology. Carns holds a Juris Doctorate from The John Marshall Law School and a Bachelor’s degree in Philosophy from DePauw University.

 

 




Webinar: How to Win Using Native Format Capture Social Media Data

Social mediaHanzo will present a webinar on Dec. 19, 2018, at 1:30 pm EST discussing common challenges and helpful solutions for capturing the dynamic elements of social media data.

The company says social media is a valuable way to communicate with customers, but many heavily regulated financial firms shy away from its use, fearing that regulatory compliance will be too difficult.

Organizations can also find social media to be critical in ediscovery because it offers a rare window into people’s daily thoughts and activities, even after those people have become embroiled in litigation.

Moderator Evan Gumz, senior account executive from Hanzo ,will be joined by panelists Steve Tanner, social nedia & online communities lead from Relativity, and Michael Quartararo, managing director of eDPM Advisory Services to discuss:

  • How organizations use social media in the course of their business and the associated risk
  • Challenges surrounding compliance and eDiscovery collections
  • What is driving compliance and ediscovery practitioners toward superior native-format collections
  • And more.

Register for the webinar.

 

 




Longtime Colleagues Reunite to Create Labor & Employment Section

Christie Newkirk and Mark A. Shank have joined Diamond McCarthy LLP in Dallas and created the firm’s Labor & Employment Law Section.

The firm said Newkirk has more than 20 years’ experience representing employers and executives. Her work involves litigation, counseling, investigations, training, and representing executives.

Shank’s practice focuses on complex disputes, which he arbitrates, investigates, prosecutes, or defends as a neutral across the nation, according to the firm.

Read about the two lawyers.

 

 




Supreme Court Suggests Forcing Lawyers to Pay Bar Association Dues Violates Their Free Speech

The U.S. Supreme Court may be on verge of upsetting the longstanding system of states requiring lawyers to pay dues to bar associations, reports the Los Angeles Times.

At least 30 states require the dues, in most cases with bar associations regulating the legal profession by licensing lawyers and disciplining those who violate the rules. Lawyers in turn are required to pay dues to cover the cost, explains the TimesDavid G. Savage.

Savage writes:

“In a brief order on Monday, the court overturned a ruling last year by the U.S. 8th Circuit Court of Appeals that had upheld mandatory bar dues in North Dakota and sent the case back “for further consideration in light of Janus.”

In Janus v. AFSCME, the court last June struck down state laws in California and elsewhere that required teachers and other public employees to pay fees to support a union.

Read the LA Times article.

 

 




Subpoenas Issued to Trump Organization in Emoluments Lawsuit

The attorneys general of Maryland and the District of Columbia on Tuesday formally demanded financial records from U.S. President Donald Trump’s businesses as part of their lawsuit alleging his dealings with foreign governments violate anti-corruption clauses of the U.S. Constitution, reports Reuters.

The Trump Organization Inc., the president’s privately owned real estate company, and related corporate entities received the subpoenas, according to Reuters reporter Jan Wolfe.

The report quotes George Brown, a professor at Boston College Law School:

The development “brings us closer to judicially enforced discovery about the Trump empire,” said Brown. “It will probably tell us a lot we don’t know because nobody is going to hide that stuff in the face of a subpoena.”

Read the Reuters article.

 

 




Justice Department Charges 4 Over Panama Papers Tax Schemes

Panama PapersThe Washington Post reports that the Justice Department charged four people Tuesday with scheming for decades to hide tens of millions of dollars from the Internal Revenue Service — the first U.S. indictment over alleged tax evasion revealed in 2016 through the Panama Papers.

Post reporter Devlin Barrett writes that those charged include a former investment manager, a former U.S. resident, an American accountant and a Panamanian lawyer who once worked for the “firm at the center of the case, Mossack Fonseca.

“The 11-count indictment unsealed in New York marks the first time the U.S. government has charged anyone with tax crimes related to the firm — and authorities suggested others could soon be charged,” according to Barrett.

Read the Washington Post article.