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Mylan NV sued Kirkland & Ellis LLP over the law firm’s role advising Teva Pharmaceutical, which is in a bitter takeover battle with the drug maker.
David Wildstein, ex-ally of New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy and two former state officials were charged in the George Washington Bridge scandal.
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Proposals for a national privacy law would allow companies to decide if breaches warrant telling customers.
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Regulators in the U.K. have had “spoofing” and other dubious trading strategies in their cross hairs for at least the past six years.
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Federal prosecutors charged 11 Chinese nationals as part of a crackdown on the “birth tourism” industry in Southern California.
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The death of Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old man who died last month after suffering a severe spinal injury in police custody, thrusts Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby into the national spotlight. On Friday,she announced that six city police officers were to be charged in Mr. Gray's death. Here are five things to know about Ms. Mosby.
New York City is expected to spend parts of a $447 million settlement it is set to receive from French bank BNP Paribas SA on initiatives for its criminal justice system, officials said, including creating a database where local agencies and police would share information about individual defendants and cases.
Law Blog rounds up the morning's legal news.
Democratic lawmakers are upping the ante on the minimum wage Thursday, pitching a plan to lift the federal pay floor by 66% to $12 an hour by 2020.
Energy Future is setting a schedule for its chapter 11 exit plan, the Revel casino's former owner wants to get votes on a plan to divvy up sale proceeds, and Caesars' examiner wants to present a deal with creditors over their investigations into pre-bankruptcy asset transfers.
A bankruptcy judge has ordered the Roman Catholic Diocese of Gallup, N.M., its insurance carriers and lawyers representing 58 alleged sexual-abuse victims to begin mediation no later than July 15.
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BNP Paribas SA was sentenced Friday to five years of probation and ordered to pay a $140 million fine. Along with the sentencing, the U.S. announced it would try to compensate victims of the bank's violations.
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