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Hospitals Providing Medical Care to Federal Employees Covered by HMOs May Be Subject to OFCCP's Affirmative Action and Other Requirements [Labor and Employment Alert]

April 08, 2013

Publication - Health Care & Life Sciences, Labor & Employment

Over the years, the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP), which enforces affirmative action and equal opportunity regulations for federal contractors and subcontractors, has tried to assert jurisdiction over hospitals that provide medical care to federal employees in various controversial ways. For example, OFCCP has claimed hospitals are federal subcontractors when they provide medical services to Blue Cross/Blue Shield and/or HMO policyholders pursuant to the insurance providers’ agreements with the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia just gave the green light to OFCCP to assert its jurisdiction over hospitals, at least where HMOs covering federal employees are involved.


Cozen O'Connor Launches New Blog Avoiding Insurance Bad Faith

April 08, 2013

News - Bad Faith, Insurance Coverage

As the name suggests, the latest blog from Cozen O'Connor will offer insight into the issues that surround allegations of bad faith or other unfair business practices.


Superstorm Sandy is Causing New York and New Jersey Legislators to Reconsider Passing Legislation that Would Establish a Private Right of Action for Bad Faith Claim Handling [Global Insurance Alert]

April 05, 2013

Publication - Bad Faith, Insurance Coverage - Insurance

Policyholders in New York and New Jersey presently have no private right of action against insurance companies for alleged violations of each state’s respective statutory claim handling guidelines – New York’s Unfair Claim Settlement Practices Act, N.Y. Ins. Law § 2601, and New Jersey’s Unfair Claim Settlement Practices Act, N.J. Admin. Code tit. 11, §§ 2-17.6 and 2-17.7. Although the New York and New Jersey statutes each prohibit insurers from engaging in unfair claim settlement practices, neither allows insureds the right to enforce the laws or seek damages for a violation by filing a lawsuit against the insurer. Rather, the Insurance Department for each state are vested with the exclusive power of enforcement, and then only when an insurer engages in a pattern of violations demonstrating that the mishandling of claims is a general business practice. That may soon change, however.


New York Increases Its Minimum Wage [Labor & Employment Alert]

April 02, 2013

Publication - Employment Litigation, Labor & Employment

On March 29, 2013, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo signed legislation that will raise the New York minimum wage in staged increases over the next three years.


West Palm Attorneys Levine, Dickenson, Criscuolo Favorably Settle Securities Case

April 01, 2013

News - Corporate Governance & Securities

The Herald-Tribune reported on the settlement that saved clients significantly in this securities action brought by the Florida Attorney General and the Office of Financial Regulation.


Martin Schrier Joins Cozen O’Connor’s Miami Office

April 01, 2013

Press Release - Corporate

Mr. Schrier, formerly a partner with K&L Gates, focuses his practice on complex business transactions, including domestic and international mergers and acquisitions, leveraged buyouts, restructurings, and venture and growth capital investments.


Take the Target Off Your Back [HRO Today]

April 01, 2013

Publication - Employment Litigation, Labor & Employment

Disability discrimination remains a hot button issue in the workplace. Employees and applicants file more disability discrimination charges with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) each year, totaling some 25,000 charges in fiscal year 2011 alone.


Cozen O’Connor Elects 20 Associates to Membership

March 27, 2013

Press Release - Antitrust & Competition, Construction Law, Insurance Coverage, Intellectual Property, Labor & Employment, Private Client Services, Products Liability, Real Estate, Subrogation & Recovery, White Collar Defense & Investigations

Ian Blum, Alphonso Collins, Kathryn Crary, Lynnette Espy-Williams, Elizabeth Featherman, Matthew Glazer, Nelsy Gomez, Andrea Hammel, Keenya Harrold, Charles Jesuit, Jr., Lezlie Madden, Marilyn Neiman, Tracey Nguyen, Cartherine Rosato Reilly, Megan Scheib, Daniel Schuch, John Schwartz, Shari Shapiro, Marko Stamenkovic, and Norasha Williams have been elected to membership in the firm.


Five Key Areas to Watch During Obama’s Second Term [HR Morning]

March 27, 2013

Publication - Employment Litigation, Labor & Employment

One of Barack Obama’s first actions when he became president was to sign the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009, resetting the statute of limitations each paycheck for equal-pay gender discrimination lawsuits and making it easier for employees to pursue them.


Removal Woes: Two New Decisions Portray a Narrow Gate of Entry [The Legal Intelligencer]

March 27, 2013

Publication

Two recent decisions prove that nothing is as simple as it seems — especially removal. The opinions by the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in February illustrate hidden traps in the removal process. Given the importance of forum to the outcome, litigation counsel should understand not just the letter of removal statutes, but the nuances developed by recent case law.


Jonathan Grossman Quoted in InsideCounsel

March 26, 2013

News - Antitrust & Competition

In an article titled, "How Antitrust Authorities View Mergers and Acquisitions," Jonathan Grossman (Washington, D.C.) of the firm's Antitrust Practice Group discusses ​the complaints of Bazaarvoice Inc., and a matter involving the company's acquisition of its competitor PowerReviews.


Check the White Pages for Personal Information: Massachusetts Decision Highlights the Expansion of Consumer Privacy Litigation [Cyber & Technology Alert]

March 26, 2013

Publication - Insurance Coverage, Technology, Privacy & Data Security

Last week, in Tyler v. Michaels Stores, Inc., the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts responded to certified questions presented by the district court and interpreted a Massachusetts statute to reflect the state’s interest in protecting consumer privacy. No. SJC-11145, 2013 Mass. LEXIS 40 (Mass. Mar. 11, 2013). In particular, the court held that a consumer’s zip code constitutes personal identification information, and that a consumer can bring an action under the relevant statute absent a claim of identify fraud.


Ken Fisher Quoted in The Brooklyn Bureau

March 25, 2013

News - Business

Fisher of the Business Law Department discusses Marty Markowitz, the Borough President of Brooklyn, NY.


Gabelli v. SEC: The Supreme Court Limits the Statute of Limitations for SEC Actions [Professional Liability Alert]

March 20, 2013

Publication - Insurance Coverage, Professional Liability Insurance Coverage - Insurance

In a recent unanimous decision, the U.S. Supreme Court held that the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) has five years from the date when an alleged fraud begins – not from the date when the SEC uncovers the fraud – to bring an action seeking penalties. It is likely this decision will have a large-scale impact, including an impact on D&O insurers, by spurring the SEC to complete its investigations and bring enforcement actions sooner rather than later.


New York City Employers Cannot Discriminate Based on Unemployment Status As of June 11, 2013 [Labor & Employment Alert]

March 19, 2013

Publication - Employment Litigation, Labor & Employment

The New York City Council continues to grow the chasm that exists between New York City employment law and its state and federal counterparts. Specifically, on March 13, 2013, the council overwhelmingly enacted (by a 43-4 vote) a local law that precludes employers and employment agencies from refusing to consider or hire an applicant because he or she is unemployed, and from posting advertisements that require job applicants to be employed. This comes less than a month after New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg initially vetoed the legislation, which now is set to become effective on June 11, 2013.


Courts Continue to Split on Whether Defense Obligation Is a First Party Benefit Under Colorado Law, but Agree Duty to Defend Is a Joint and Several Obligation [Global Insurance Alert]

March 19, 2013

Publication - Bad Faith, Insurance Coverage - Insurance

In D.R. Horton, Inc.—Denver v. Mountain States Mutual Casualty Co., No. 12-cv-01080 (February 25, 2013), another U.S. District Court judge for the District of Colorado determined a liability insured seeking defense costs from its insurer may qualify as a “first-party claimant” for purposes of Colorado’s Unfair Claim Settlement Practices Act, potentially entitling the insured to recover unpaid defense costs, attorneys’ fees in prosecuting the recovery action and two times the unpaid defense costs as a penalty.


IP: Compound Patents Take a Hit in Delaware District Court [Inside Counsel]

March 19, 2013

Publication - Intellectual Property, Patents

A recent decision from the Delaware District Court held that the composition of matter patent for the drug Baraclude was invalid as obvious. This opinion has drawn immediate attention because it is the first time that a lead compound obviousness challenge has succeeded in a district court since KSR v. Teleflex issued. What this means for inside counsel depends on which side of the aisle you are on, but regardless this decision may provide the beachhead for obviousness attacks where none existed before.


Washington Supreme Court: Insurers May Not Reserve the Right to Seek Reimbursement of Non-covered Defense Costs [Global Insurance Alert]

March 18, 2013

Publication - Insurance Coverage - Insurance

The Washington Supreme Court joined a minority of jurisdictions that hold that insurers may not unilaterally reserve the right to seek reimbursement for defense costs paid in defending non-covered claims through a reservation of rights letter. In National Surety Corp. v. Immunex Corp., the Washington Supreme Court, in a five to four decision, held that insurers defending under a reservation of rights may not seek reimbursement for defense costs from the insured, even if there is a determination that the insured is not entitled to coverage under the policy No. 86535-3 (March 7, 2013). In so holding, the court recognized that, upon a showing of actual and substantial prejudice resulting from an insured’s delayed tender, an insurer could minimize or avoid liability for defense costs.


Cozen O’Connor Grows in Florida With Six Lateral Attorneys: Firm Expands South Florida Presence, Opens Office in West Palm Beach

March 18, 2013

Press Release - Insurance Corporate & Regulatory, Insurance Coverage, Private Client Services, Real Estate, Subrogation & Recovery

Six attorneys from the firm of Edwards Wildman are joining Cozen O'Connor, in practice areas that include trusts and estates/private client services, real estate, insurance coverage, reinsurance, insurance corporate and regulatory and litigation.


E-Discovery: Amendments Propose Extending 'Meet and Confer' Requirement [New York Law Journal]

March 18, 2013

Publication - Electronic Discovery & Practice Advisory Services

The era when a lawyer can competently practice without understanding a client's electronic data is rapidly drawing to a close. New York's Office of Court Administration has recommended amendments to the rules governing preliminary conferences in non-Commercial Division cases that should radically reduce the number of cases where one can stand in front of a judge like Saturday Night Live's fabled unfrozen caveman lawyer, proudly ignorant of electronic discovery issues.

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