| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2015-01-01 | N/A | Merger between law firm Dentons and Chinese law firm Dacheng. | Global | View |
This document is a 'Year in Review' email newsletter from Law360 dated December 26, 2019, summarizing major trends, mergers, and judicial confirmations in the legal industry. It includes extensive lists of law firms, companies, and government agencies mentioned in their reporting. The document appears in this collection likely due to the inclusion of the law firm 'Epstein Becker Green' in the list of law firms, which is a keyword match for 'Epstein' but unrelated to Jeffrey Epstein personally.
This document is an 'Access to Justice' email newsletter from Law360 dated April 20, 2020. It aggregates various legal news stories, primarily focused on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the justice system, including court closures, remote hearings, and bankruptcy issues. It is relevant to the Epstein files because it contains a summary of a recent Eleventh Circuit ruling that the Crime Victims' Rights Act protections do not arise until after a formal criminal charge is filed, which is described as a blow to Epstein's victims.
This document is a 'Law360 Appellate' email newsletter dated April 22, 2019. It provides summaries of recent legal cases across various US Circuit Courts (DC, Federal, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 9th, 11th) and the Supreme Court, covering topics such as the Census citizenship question, Title VII discrimination, and patent disputes. It also lists legal job openings and mentions various law firms and companies in sidebars. The law firm 'Epstein Becker Green' appears in a list of firms, which is likely the only connection to the name Epstein, unrelated to Jeffrey Epstein.
This document is a bibliography page (Section 7, page 117) from a House Oversight Committee report. It lists sources from 2015-2018 focusing on Chinese foreign influence, money laundering scandals involving Chinese banks (AgBank, China Construction Bank, ICBC), and political donations affecting US elections (specifically mentioning the Clinton Foundation and Terry McAuliffe). The text portion analyzes how the Chinese Communist Party leverages foreign corporations and joint ventures to legitimize its rule and enforce political compliance.
This document is page 108 of a House Oversight report (Bates: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020567) discussing the hiring of former senior government officials by Chinese companies and foreign influence in US state and local politics. It details specific instances of financial influence, including a $120,000 donation to Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe by Chinese industrialist Wang Wenliang, and lobbying efforts by companies like BYD, Huawei, and Wanda. It also highlights a case involving the Imperial Pacific casino in Saipan hiring former CIA and FBI directors, and a 2017 FEC complaint regarding Dalian Wanda's funding of a California ballot initiative via a loan from a US company.
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