Today’s Buzz: Romney’s Taxes, The Butt Face, Gambling, More
What we learned in law today, from JD Supra:
There are three things employers need to focus on right now to comply with healthcare reform laws (McNees Wallace & Nurick LLC)
Putting unpaid interns to work in the kitchen might earn you a lawsuit (Mintz Levin)
The “religious exemption” to the contraceptive mandate of the Affordable Care Act is actually quite limited in scope (Bryan Cave)
Sometimes lawyers violate copyright laws just like the rest of us (Duane Morris LLP)
Mitt Romney probably isn’t trying to hide anything illegal by not disclosing his tax returns (Morvillo, Abramowitz, Grand, Iason, Anello & Bohrer, P.C.)
You knew them as The South Butt. Now they’re The Butt Face. But for The North Face, they still deserve to get tossed out by the seat of their pants (Foley Hoag LLP)
School kids + social media + free speech = lawsuits (Lawyers.com)
For Hong Kong-listed companies, finding investors in today’s economy is no longer just a pipe dream (Skadden Arps)
Student loan debt in the U.S. stands at $1,000,000,000,000 (John Skiba)
Amateur and professional sports leagues are betting against New Jersey’s Sports Gambling Law (Pillsbury)
Surfing can be a bad idea if you’re an employer, and the “ocean” is really the social media accounts of your employees (K&L Gates LLP)
Q: When can you claim a $40 million tax bill on something that has no value? A: When you’re the IRS (Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP)
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