V&E, Latham and Andrews Kurth Advise in M&A Worth $1.8 Billion
Lawyers from the three firms helped ETP and Sunoco negotiate an $816 dropdown transaction and LINN Energy secure a $1 billion equity capital commitment from Quantum Energy Partners.
Free Speech, Due Process and Trial by Jury
Lawyers from the three firms helped ETP and Sunoco negotiate an $816 dropdown transaction and LINN Energy secure a $1 billion equity capital commitment from Quantum Energy Partners.
Lawyers from the three firms helped ETP and Sunoco negotiate an $816 dropdown transaction and LINN Energy secure a $1 billion equity capital commitment from Quantum Energy Partners.
Dallas-based Baylor Scott & White Health and Tenet Healthcare Corporation have agreed to form a partnership that will provide health care for five North Texas hospitals.
Houston-based Crestwood Midstream Partners announced Monday that it closed a private offering of unsecured senior notes that raised $700 million.
Houston-based Crestwood Midstream Partners announced Monday that it closed a private offering of unsecured senior notes that raised $700 million.
Andrew Strong, the former CEO and GC at College Station-based Kalon Biotherapeutics, is returning to practice environmental and life sciences law at Pillsbury, a New York law firm that has about 20 lawyers in Houston. A 1994 graduate of the South Texas College of Law, Strong was at partner at Pillsbury from 2005 to 2009, where he represented several major energy companies, including Chevron, Conoco and Valero, in litigation matters.
Andrew Strong, the former CEO and GC at College Station-based Kalon Biotherapeutics, is returning to practice environmental and life sciences law at Pillsbury, a New York law firm that has about 20 lawyers in Houston. A 1994 graduate of the South Texas College of Law, Strong was at partner at Pillsbury from 2005 to 2009, where he represented several major energy companies, including Chevron, Conoco and Valero, in litigation matters.
An administrative law judge ruled Thursday that two Colleyville financial executives did little-to-nothing wrong in their leadership positions at Dallas-based Penson Financial, a now-defunct clearing service for U.S. brokerage houses dealing in stock trades. The case is a significant win for Haynes and Boone, which led the defense team and a major loss for the SEC, which lost only one of the 23 cases it filed with ALJs. By comparison, the agency lost one-third of the cases it brought in federal court during the same time period.
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