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So far councilsoft has created 1214 blog entries.

When Whistling Is Your Work

David Tykulsker’s recent opinion piece in the Star-Ledger, “N.J. Supreme Court should protect workplace whistleblowers,” paints a very one-sided, doom-and-gloom picture of the soon-to-be-argued employment law case Lippman v. Ethicon, Inc. Whistle-blowing under Conscientious Employee Protection Act (CEPA) has long been understood to mean something different than doing your job if you are tasked with being an in-house watchdog. Efforts by the plaintiff’s bar to upend this area of law to allow for more lawsuits should be dismissed.

By |2015-01-08T20:53:22-05:00January 8, 2015|News, Top Stories|0 Comments

New Jersey’s Leviathan

New Jersey’s Consumer Fraud Act has been expanded over the years by the courts and the legislature to the point where it is no longer focused on protecting consumers from fraud. It is instead a catch-all claim that is pulled into all sorts of disputes - consumers and fraud optional. A few recent cases really illustrate this point.

By |2015-01-08T20:50:38-05:00January 8, 2015|News, Recent News, Top Stories|0 Comments

REBUTTAL: NJ Consumer Fraud Act Certainly Has Devolved

A few weeks ago, Law360 published an opinion piece by William J. Pinilis of Pinilis Halpern LLP concerning our recent panel discussion of New Jersey’s Consumer Fraud Act and our overall efforts to reform the Act. This week, Law360 has a rebuttal to Mr. Pinilis’ column penned by fellow panel member Dr. Joanna Shepherd of the Emory University School of Law.

By |2015-01-07T17:50:20-05:00January 7, 2015|News, Recent News, Top Stories|0 Comments

Let’s fight fraud, not business. Reform New Jersey’s Consumer Fraud Act now!

This morning at the State House, Sen. Steven Oroho (R-24) joined with the New Jersey Civil Justice Institute, the Commerce and Industry Association of New Jersey, the National Federation of Independent Businesses, the New Jersey Business and Industry Association, and the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce to call for the legislature to pass some common sense legal reforms to improve the state’s business climate.

By |2014-12-18T15:50:29-05:00December 18, 2014|News, Press Releases, Top Stories|0 Comments
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