Morrison & Foerster Further Strengthens Cross-Border Litigation and Regulatory Capabilities With New Tokyo Partner
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Takahiro Nonaka’s arrival adds to already strong bench of Japan litigators; further cements position as top international law firm in Japan. TOKYO (PRWEB) May 10, 2021
Morrison & Foerster, a leading global law firm, is pleased to announce that Takahiro Nonaka has joined its Tokyo office as a partner in the Litigation Department. Mr. Nonaka brings to the firm extensive experience across commercial litigation, internal investigations, and global compliance and regulatory matters. His practice complements the firm’s leading global capabilities across Investigations + White Collar Defense, FCPA + Global Anti-Corruption, Global Ethics + Compliance, Antitrust, and Privacy + Data Security. In addition, Mr. Nonaka’s arrival further cements Morrison & Foerster’s position as the top intern
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A Pennsylvania lawsuit said Tesla was in breach of its contract after raising a Solar Roof price.
The suit, filed by Philip Dahlin and Mary Arndtsen, said it would seek federal class-action status.
The increase was a significant disappointment, Dahlin told Insider.
More than half a year after Philip Dahlin and Mary Arndtsen signed a contract with Tesla to install a Solar Roof on their home in New Hope, Pennsylvania, the couple received a message from the company.
Tesla said their price would now be $78,352.66, up from the $46,084.80 price they d agreed upon. Our budget was based on the contract that we had, so it was not something that we had prepared for, Dahlin told Insider this week via phone.
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WASHINGTON In the minds of some of former president Donald Trump’s supporters, when hundreds of rioters descended on the US Capitol on Jan. 6, it was because Trump told them to do it.
“The president of the United States of America was telling citizens something evil has happened and you all have to go fix it,” a lawyer for Jeffrey Sabol, charged with using a stolen police baton to attack an officer, told a judge.
Jacob Chansley, the “QAnon shaman” who left a note for then–vice president Mike Pence on the Senate dais that read “justice is coming” and is charged with carrying around a 6-foot pole with a metal spearhead, wouldn’t have gone to the Capitol “but for the specific words of the then-President,” his lawyer argued.