April 2009

Deteriorating economic conditions threaten a massive wave of corporate defaults.  Corporate borrowers’ inability to fulfill debt obligations could not only prompt a bankruptcy filing surge, but could also result in a flood of lawsuits and claims as creditors and shareholders seek to recoup their losses.  These claims could present a host of challenging D&O coverage

Antitrust regulation and securities enforcement each involve entirely separate areas of the law. However, an increasingly frequent follow-on effect of a regulatory investigation for allegedly anticompetitive conduct is an ensuing class action lawsuit under the securities laws. A lawsuit recently filed in the Southern District of New York, which also has some unique characteristics all

Litigation over executive compensation is nothing new. The long-running clash over Richard Grasso’s $187 million NYSE pay package is only one of many titanic legal battles compensation issues produced in the past. But executive compensation litigation recently seems to have entered a new phase, fueled by moral outrage.

Drawing on popular anger evidenced most

Following close on the heels of the Massachusetts regulator’s action filed last week against Madoff feeder-fund Fairfield Greenwich and related individuals, on April 6, 2009, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo initiated a civil action in New York (New York County) Supreme Court against J. Ezra Merkin and Madoff feeder fund Gabriel Capital Corporation. The

The possibility that a conflict of interest could arise when an attorney or law firm simultaneously representes a corporation and one or more of its officers or directors is a a frequently recurring issue. The issue  was raised recently, for example, in the civil complaint that former Stanford Financial Group CFO Laura Pendergest-Holt filed against the

The global financial crisis has produced challenges across the entire economy, but the financial sector, where all the problems arguably began, has been particularly hard hit. While the most investment firms and other banking institutions may have experienced the most dramatic consequences, insurance companies have also been swept up in the whirlwind.

The extent

Georgia’s banks have issues. The state has led the nation in the number of bank failures since January 1, 2008, a fact that earlier this year (even before the most recent round of closures) led the Wall Street Journal (here) to describe the Atlanta area as "the bank failure capital of the world."