Thacher, Proffitt & Wood Closing Doors
After 160 years, the subprime-mortgage crisis wipes out one of the city's oldest firms.
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After 160 years, the subprime-mortgage crisis wipes out one of the city's oldest firms.
A Park Avenue lawyer is accused of swindling hedge funds out of millions.
'New York Times Magazine' writer Matt Bai and 'The Nation' columnist Patricia J. Williams argue over what an Obama presidency might mean for the judiciary and abortion, the current role of religion in government, and whether homeowners aren't partly to blame for the financial crisis.
Today, Slate's Dahlia Lithwick and author Ayelet Waldman discuss Michelle Bachmann's anti-Obama blunder, the discouraging fight against incipient voter suppression, and George W. Bush's one enduring, “raging success.”
In the criminal justice system, bloodsucking is considered especially heinous.
The former Staten Island representative will be helping Rudy’s firm on government affairs.
Disney, of course, doesn't think this is nearly as hilarious as we do.
Clearly, he doesn't know Daily Intel's golden rule. That and more, in our daily roundup of need-to-know news from the fields of finance, media, law, and real estate.
Fired intellectual-
property lawyer Jeremy Pitcock claims his ex-employer's flashy PR firm made a little "inappropriate behavior" charge sound like he was caught driving a hooker around backward in a car seat, or something.
Plus, '02138' graduates to a new publisher, Bush goes online, and Skadden makes big bucks — all in our daily industry roundup.
Also, Microsoft gives up on Yahoo, Berkshire Hathaway's profits tank briefly, and Buzz Bissinger apologizes to Will Leitch, all in our daily industry roundup.
A slew of other women join the class-action suit against Bloomberg LP for discrimination of female employees.
Apparently the talk-show host is not classy enough to address the future document reviewers of our nation's enormous law firms.
The parallels were there all along, even before we heard Scalia basically admit to the synchronicity between his life and "greasy git" Snape's.
Once again, the Aussie media mogul is all over our daily industry roundup.
He's got to deal with Viacom CEO Philippe Dauman, who the 'Post' says is out for Moonves's neck.
Not enough 'Times' newsroom workers are taking the buyouts, BlackBerrys are outlawed at a law firm, and Ikea is finally arriving.
Publishing musical chairs, bad news on the economy front, and gripes about law-school rankings — all in our daily roundup.
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