Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
Insurance brokerage firm Brown & Brown Inc. has appointed as its chief legal officer an attorney who was its chief risk, regulatory and compliance counsel before taking over the top legal post on an interim basis following the death of her predecessor earlier this year.
Partnership promotions, BigLaw hires and firm merger votes helped make this another action-packed week for the legal industry. Test your legal news savvy here with Law360 Pulse's weekly quiz.
Cryptocurrency exchange company Crypto.com has elevated one of its senior in-house counsel to chief legal officer following the resignation of its previous top lawyer, according to announcements shared on LinkedIn.
Activist investors are being cautious by introducing far fewer proposals during the 2026 proxy season, and some companies are being equally wary by negotiating deals behind closed doors rather than allowing shareholders to vote on issues, according to data in an annual proxy review released Thursday.
Research and advisory company Gartner Inc. paid its legal chief nearly $3.9 million in 2025, his first year as a named executive officer at the company, according to a securities filing late Wednesday.
The former top in-house attorney at Martin Marietta Materials Inc. earned total compensation of more than $2.3 million in his final full year at the Raleigh, North Carolina-based construction materials supplier, according to new public documents filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Delaware-based ChristianaCare has announced that its CEO will be retiring in September and its former chief legal officer, who was promoted a few months ago to executive vice president, will take the helm of the health system.
McDermott Will & Schulte has grown its abilities at the intersection of sports, media, governance and high-stakes deals with the addition of the former longtime legal leader of the Professional Golfers' Association of America.
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor publicly apologized Wednesday for comments she made at a University of Kansas appearance earlier this month criticizing Justice Brett Kavanaugh.
The chief legal counsel at Flowers Foods Inc. earned a total compensation package of around $1.8 million in 2025, which marks a slight decrease from her earnings the previous year, according to a recent securities filing.
Hermeus, a venture-backed defense aviation company that recently moved its headquarters to Los Angeles from Atlanta, has tapped a former Relativity Space attorney to serve as its new general counsel and executive leadership team member.
A Connecticut state judge has ordered UBS AG to hand some communications with its lawyers and prosecutors in U.S. and U.K. criminal cases to former trader Tom Hayes, whose $400 million lawsuit claims he was made a scapegoat to shield senior bank executives from Libor-rigging allegations.
Consumer goods giant Kimberly‑Clark Corp. Wednesday announced its new organizational structure and key leadership team, including retaining general counsel Grant McGee, that will take effect when the company completes its pending acquisition of Kenvue Inc.
The largest law firms continued to get the bulk of the work in 2025 despite having the most expensive rates, while mid-tier firms are grabbing a bigger piece of the action, according to a new report by LexisNexis CounselLink.
The legal leader for toymaker Mattel Inc. took a $540,000 hit in non-equity incentive pay, lowering his total compensation in 2025 to $2.8 million, according to a securities filing.
It turns out that Sophia Contreras Schwartz lives just a quarter-mile away from John Orta, who in summer 2018 was preparing to start as the first lawyer at the location-based social network that connects neighbors and fosters community interaction. Here, Contreras Schwartz shared with Law360 Pulse how her path to becoming chief legal officer was "very Nextdoor."
PwC's general counsel and chief risk officer in the United Kingdom is now the next global general counsel, as the most recent top lawyer for the firm steps aside in preparation of her retirement, the company said Tuesday.
A New Jersey state court judge has granted Holtec International's bid to lift a stay and amend its suit alleging fraud claims against its former general counsel and others accused of embezzling tens of millions of dollars from the company.
As law firm finance and operations teams focus on boosting efficiency by migrating to the cloud and using more artificial intelligence in processes, areas of friction still exist today.
Howmet Aerospace Inc. has found a new top attorney who joins the company from Newport News Shipbuilding, a division of Huntington Ingalls Industries.
Cooley LLP has strengthened its private equity offering by adding Silver Lake's former legal director of fund formation as a New York-based partner, the firm announced Monday.
Following two straight years of receiving a total pay package worth more than $5 million, the chief legal officer at contact lens company Bausch & Lomb Corp. saw his 2025 compensation drop to approximately $3.6 million, according to a recent securities filing.
The top attorney for Booking Holdings Inc., the parent of Booking.com and other websites that make travel and restaurant reservations, saw his compensation drop for the second year in a row to about $10.7 million in 2025, a nearly $4 million drop, according to a securities filing.
University of Michigan Law School has announced it launched an AI Advisory Council this month as it continues to grow its legal artificial intelligence offerings.
The former legal leader of Sirius XM Holdings Inc. earned about $6.2 million in his only year with the company before retiring, according to a recent securities filing.
Trends and statistics reveal that law firms of all sizes and practice areas remained attractive litigation targets this year, so firms must take concrete steps to avoid professional liability risks in the year to come, say Douglas Richmond and Andrew Ricke at Lockton Companies.
New job archetypes are rapidly replacing the traditional model of the lawyer as artificial intelligence proliferates, and to remain competitive, firms will need to embrace the diverse portfolio of talent required to navigate, design and critique algorithmic systems, says Dmitri Mehlhorn at Atoll Society.
Legal management services organizations, which outsource the administrative aspects of law firms to separate entities, are poised to disrupt the industry in the year to come, so firms and attorneys should consider the advantages and disadvantages of several MSO models, say Frederick Shelton and Ayven Dodd at Shelton & Steele.
Impostor syndrome prevails as a main root cause of attorney burnout, but sufferers can equip themselves with a series of practice tips that build confidence through evidence, not emotion, to address the mindset behind this damaging condition, says Jonathan Cohen at PNY.
Today's general counsel expect outside lawyers to show interest, relevance and value long before there is a live matter to address, including by engaging with attorneys at every level of the company and dispensing free advice thoughtfully, says Andrew Dick at The L Suite.
Series
Biz Development Tip Of The Month: Start Early In Your Career
Having the courage to embark on your legal business development strategy early in your career allows you to sooner reap the rewards of a strong network, which in turn can increase the momentum of referrals over the course of your career, says Kristin Housh at Sheppard Mullin.
As the legal profession navigates changes driven by artificial intelligence and broader pressures, leaders should consider behavioral research-backed strategies to translate enthusiasm into tangible results for team performance, say attorneys at King & Spalding.
Though law firms and private equity firms appear to be strange bedfellows, such combinations may offer opportunities for ailing midsize firms — which must be weighed against risks to culture, brand and growth prospects, say directors at FTI Consulting.
This year's Buying Legal Council Conference highlighted three emerging forces in how buyers and sellers operate in the legal ecosystem — artificial intelligence, data and preferred panels — and organizations would be well advised to combine them into an integrated framework for transparency, performance and collaboration, says Matthew Prinn at RFP Advisory Group.
As legal departments face mounting pressure to do more with less, general counsel should lead a structured process for adopting generative artificial intelligence tools to transform productivity, manage risk and align with enterprise priorities, says Maesea McCalpin at Gartner.
Amid law firm layoffs of business development staff, lawyers cannot depend solely on their firms to foster their professional growth, and must instead create their own initiatives for building community, says Lana Manganiello at Practice Growth Partner.
As artificial intelligence changes the dynamic between in-house and outside counsel, both internal and external legal teams must thoughtfully reimagine how to mutually leverage AI tools to collaborate and deliver successful outcomes, say Karineh Khachatourian at KXT Law and Diane Honda at Redis.
Sirisha Gummaregula at QuisLex offers advice on navigating the challenges that come with taking on an in-house counsel role after leaving law firm life, including learning your company's business goals and leading with empathy and collaboration.
As potential clients with legal questions increasingly rely on summaries generated by artificial intelligence, attorneys must rethink their content strategy to make sure AI chatbots and search overviews cite their thought leadership, say Ioana Good and Adrien Maines at Promova and Nancy Myrland at Myrland Marketing.
Complex corporate litigation now often unfolds under the glare of a parallel trial in the court of public opinion, requiring attorneys to adopt a cohesive strategy for legal filings, leadership communications and narrative control, says Monica Smith at Integer PR.