

Perhaps SEC officials hoped they were bolstering their agency’s image as a tough regulator when they reported on October 11, 2016 that the SEC had filed a record number of enforcement actions in fiscal year 2016. That was certainly the way the officials quoted in the agency’s press release played it. But if that was their plan, Senator Elizabeth Warren, at least, was having none of it. Just days after the agency released its enforcement statistics, Senator Warren sent a 12-page letter to President Barack Obama calling for the President to fire Mary Jo White as SEC Chair, because, the Senator contends, under White’s watch the agency has undermined the administration’s priorities, ignored the SEC’s core mission of investor protection, and failed to promulgate or implement disclosure requirements Warren supports. Continue Reading Despite Record SEC Enforcement Activity, Senator Warren Calls for President to Fire Agency Chair
As the rise of collective investor actions has gone global, one of the questions that has arisen is whether a country other than the U.S. would become a preferred forum in which investors might pursue their claims, even investors from outside the forum country. Australia is
Earlier this year, the SEC
In an increasingly global economy, questions arising from cross-border activities are an increasingly common part of day-to-day business activities. Among other things, these circumstances mean that companies frequently must contend with the legal requirements in multiple jurisdictions and deal with the associated legal exposures as well. The potential liability issues in turn raise sometimes difficult questions about indemnification and insurance. For those of us in the insurance industry, these cross-border liability, indemnification, and insurance issues can be challenging. 
The seasons arrive early in Northern Michigan, and distinctly. It is now Fall along the Great Lakes, although many of its effects are still muted.
One of the most interesting and important recent litigation-related developments has been
Delaware Chancery Court Rejects Litigation Funder’s Fee Application: Just days after the Pennsylvania court entered its opinion in the case noted above, Delaware Vice Chancellor Travis Laster entered an opinion denying the fee application of a litigation funder in yet another long-running legal battle. Laster’s September 19, 2016 opinion in Judy v. Preferred Communications Systems, Inc. can be found
One of the more interesting story lines in the world of securities class action litigation over the past several years has been 
