U.S. President Donald Trump's avalanche of executive actions this week left companies scrambling for answers. The country's major corporate law firms are competing to be the ones picking up the phone.
In closing arguments, prosecutor alleges Madigan was driven by ‘power and profit’ It was Madigan’s out-of-the-blue phone call to Solis in June 2017 – a year int ...
Haynes Boone ranks No. 1 on the latest list of the largest law firms in North Texas. Dive into the data and see where 5,000 ...
Most ominously for corporate America, perhaps, Trump also directed all federal agencies to create a list of nine private ...
While NJ firms might still follow 'diversity, equity and inclusion' practices on paper, they've stopped using the term 'DEI' ...
Illinois enacted a law that prohibits a credit card holder’s bank from charging or receiving interchange fees on the portions ...
Costco is pushing back on a shareholder proposal that urges the wholesale club operator to conduct an evaluation of any ...
The executive order signals that private businesses and organizations could be investigated over their diversity policies.
High-profile lawyers are already making headline-grabbing moves between elite firms this year—so it’s puzzling that ...
Law firms based in Florida, Georgia and Texas reported more revenue gains thanks to raising billing rates but weren't averse ...
KPMG US set up a subsidiary that has filed an application in Arizona to establish a law firm in the state, with hopes of ...
Bloomberg Law’s Roy Strom spoke with Jennifer Perkins and David Klein, M&A partners at Kirkland & Ellis, the busiest law firm ...