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The Association of Corporate Counsel (ACC) is the world's largest organization serving the professional and business interests of attorneys who practice in the legal departments of corporations, associations, nonprofits and other private-sector organizations around the globe.

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Program Materials

New Strategies for New Government Contractors on Compliance Challenges

By Stephen Daoust
Steve Epstein
Curtis Schehr
Holly Svetz

Today’s government contractors, especially those just realizing that they are government contractors, face a compliance and ethics requirements environment significantly different from that of strictly commercial companies. To address the unique compliance and ethics needs of government contractors, panelists will provide an update on recent suspension and debarment matters, awards from the False Claims Act and the lessons government contractors can learn from those decisions. This session will review the Federal Acquisition Regulations on codes of conduct and compliance programs for government contractors. Panelists will also identify strategic ways to demonstrate due diligence in managing risk to government customers, regulators and the U.S. Department of Justice.

Articles

The Telecommunications Act of 1996: Developments and Projections

By Get an update on the judicial and administrative interpretation of the statute since its passage and the current status of competition in telecommunications industries.

Get an update on the judicial and administrative interpretation of the statute since its passage and the current status of competition in telecommunications industries.

Articles

Game Changer: The America Invents Act

By Aaron L. Schwartz, Michael G. Biro and Brian C. Trinque

The America Invents Act (AIA) just changed the rules for acquiring intellectual property, pushing companies to file patents earlier in the R&D phase. Learn more about how the AIA may affect your company and what strategies you can adopt to come out on top.

Advocacy Filings

Stein, Kaplan Dismissal (July 2007)

By Lewis A. Kaplan - United States District Judge, United States District Court Southern District of New York.

The Court ruled the Department of Justice and the USAO deliberately or callously prevented defendants from obtaining funds for their defense that they lawfully would have had absent the government's interference. This opinion includes a discussion of the Thompson Memorandum, and holds the Thompson Memorandum and the USAO's actions caused KPMG to limit and then cut off payment of fees for defense.

Articles

Influencing Government: The Rules of the Game (US Campaign Finance, Lobbying Disclosure, and Gift Laws)

By Dickstein Shapiro LLP

This InfoPAK is designed to help a company understand three areas of US law that regulate efforts to influence government decision-making: campaign finance law, lobbying disclosure law, and gift law. In this day and age, a successful company often needs to: (1) participate in selecting those who control government; (2) know what disclosure consequences arise from lobbying government; and (3) avoid nasty pitfalls relating to developing friendships in the government sector. Originally published in September 2009, updated in September 2015.

Articles

Ten Tips For Electronic Discovery: Judge Shira A. Scheindlin Speaks On Proposed Rules Changes And Surviving E-Discovery Without Sanctions

By Judge Shira A. Scheindlin, Kathleen M. Massey, Laura E. Ellsworth

The rules of civil procedure are once again being amended, this time to update them for document production in the digital age. Judge Shira A. Scheindlin talks about what the proposed changes will mean for in-house counsel. She also gives advice and her top ten tips on conducting e-discovery in the current murky shadow of Rule 26, to avoid garnering sanctions for inadvertently violating a discovery order, or worse yet charges of spoliation of evidence.

Articles

Corporate Compliance Strategies Must Address the Growing Influence of State Attorneys GeneralThe "New" Regulators: Why

By Thomas L. Sager, Bernard Nash

State Attorneys General (AG) have emerged as the “new” regulators of note. Even if a business is compliant with federal regulations and inquiries by federal regulators, it still may face substantial exposure from investigations and litigation brought by state AGs. Yet, few companies address state AGs in their legal compliance and government relations programs. This article highlights the ever-expanding areas of law and commerce that AGs have targeted and provides tips on how to address AG-related litigation and policy initiatives in a company’s legal compliance and government relations programs.