Awwww Hell Yeah It’s On
Can Gary Gensler and Preet Bharara run the SEC together?
Can Gary Gensler and Preet Bharara run the SEC together?
One soon-to-be-defunct hedge fund was doing all sorts of allegedly improper accounting while the regulator watched.
Designed to reduce manual docket work by prioritizing what litigators need most: on-demand full docket summarization that explains the whole case to date, followed by on-demand document summaries for filing triage, and AI-powered natural language searching for faster search and retrieval.
An accredited investor definition that keeps their numbers about constant and decreases the likelihood of people coming crying to the SEC? It’s perfect.
The Tesla board can only help someone if he wants to help himself.
“Congrats” to Robyn Denholm.
It won’t last forever, but it will be more interesting than working for Jay Clayton, and Chicago’s a better town than D.C.
As federal borrowing caps tighten financing options for law students, one organization is stepping in to negotiate the terms they can't secure alone.
Elizabeth Holmes, who made blood-testing company Theranos a household name for all the wrong reasons, has agreed to a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
We thought Dawn Bennett was a little nutty, but it turns out that she’s just a lady who keeps tongues in jars to keep regulators off her case.
See? SEC courts can be fair.
“Hey, pay for this thing you hate” is apparently not the best enforcement mechanism.
Explore the mindset, cultural shifts, and training strategies that define the AI‑savvy lawyer, revealing why human judgment, standardized competence, and integrated learning—not technology alone—will shape the future of the profession.
Sexy, sexy corporate filings.
A quadruple-levered ETF may be too beautiful even for Donald Trump’s America.
The SEC’s new Corporation Finance chief’s a little half-hearted on his boss’ going-public crusade.
With Donald Trump offering up daily rounds of target practice to his opponents, it would be wise to hold fire on Jay Clayton.
Let’s give securities regulators a little more credit, OK?