Kirkland Hands Out $50,000 Referral Bonuses as Demand Picks Up
Kirkland & Ellis is offering junior lawyers $50,000 referral bonuses as demand increases at the world’s most profitable law firm.
State utility commissions from Louisiana and Mississippi want the Fifth Circuit to review a landmark power grid planning rule that deepened a rift between federal and some state regulators over who pays for long-range electric transmission projects.
The Environmental Protection Agency has agreed to pick up a civil rights investigation of Baltimore’s waste management plans, which residents say exposes already disadvantaged communities to pollution from one of the state’s largest trash incinerators.
A full Ninth Circuit appellate panel denied a request to reexamine a landmark constitutional climate case brought by youth plaintiffs almost a decade ago.
Denka Performance Elastomer LLC launched another legal brawl against the Environmental Protection Agency, which is under growing courtroom pressure for its crack down on carcinogenic emissions from a Louisiana neoprene facility.
During the second installment of a webinar on the Supreme Court’s Loper Bright decision, Bloomberg Law executive editor Jo-el Meyer spoke with reporter Kimberly Robinson, principal legal analyst Erin Webb, and Bloomberg Government analyst Karl Evers-Hillstrom about how the loss of Chevron deference will reverberate through federal rulemaking, the courts, and the halls of Congress.
In Nevada, can a balance be struck between an endangered toad species and the pressing need to address climate change? The future of NEPA, a 54-year-old environmental law, may hold the answer.
Kirkland & Ellis is offering junior lawyers $50,000 referral bonuses as demand increases at the world’s most profitable law firm.
The US military will look to technology companies to supply some of the artificial intelligence tools it will need across its branches, the Pentagon’s new head of AI said Monday.
The Environmental Protection Agency has agreed to pick up a civil rights investigation of Baltimore’s waste management plans, which residents say exposes already disadvantaged communities to pollution from one of the state’s largest trash incinerators.
During the second installment of a webinar on the Supreme Court’s Loper Bright decision, Bloomberg Law executive editor Jo-el Meyer spoke with reporter Kimberly Robinson, principal legal analyst Erin Webb, and Bloomberg Government analyst Karl Evers-Hillstrom about how the loss of Chevron deference will reverberate through federal rulemaking, the courts, and the halls of Congress.
State utility commissions from Louisiana and Mississippi want the Fifth Circuit to review a landmark power grid planning rule that deepened a rift between federal and some state regulators over who pays for long-range electric transmission projects.
Jenner & Block chair Thomas Perrelli and DLA Piper partner Christopher Oprison have been appointed special masters to help settle the sprawling litigation stemming from exposure to toxic water at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina.
A Georgia couple failed to provide enough information to justify their multi-million-dollar conservation easement tax deduction, a panel of judges from the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit said Monday.
A full Ninth Circuit appellate panel denied a request to reexamine a landmark constitutional climate case brought by youth plaintiffs almost a decade ago.
Australia’s hydrogen production tax incentive should be doubled to compete with the US hydrogen credit, an industry group told the country’s treasury.
Michele Beilke and Julia Trankiem have joined Seyfarth Shaw as partners in the labor & employment team, the firm announced Monday.
Jurors at the corruption trial of US Senator
Kirkland & Ellis is offering junior lawyers $50,000 referral bonuses as demand increases at the world’s most profitable law firm.
Another lawyer involved in actions to undermine the results of the 2020 and 2022 elections is now facing calls for professional discipline.
Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan LLP was disqualified by a federal court from representing
Heather Wyckoff has joined Alston & Bird as an investment funds partner in the New York office, the firm said Monday.
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