Recent actions by the United States Supreme Court and by Congress have reduced the number of avenues by which plaintiffs relying on federal law may pursue alleged wrongdoers for securities fraud and have imposed significant additional requirements on plaintiffs suing in federal court to recover from securities fraud. As a consequence, persons who claim injury from some material misrepresentation or omission in the purchase, sale, offer for purchase, or offer for sale securities, or who have suffered as a consequence of some other impropriety relating to such transactions, may find better options available in state court or under state law than are available in federal court or under federal law. For reasons explored in this Article, this ...
The Ohio Securities Act (“OSA”) was enacted in 1913 to “guard [ ] investors against fraudulent enter...
A plaintiff in securities fraud litigation usually has a whole arsenal of legal theories to pursue. ...
The Supreme Court’s decision in Dura Pharmaceuticals dramatically changed federal securities fraud l...
Recent actions by the United States Supreme Court and by Congress have reduced the number of avenues...
The decade of the 1990s produced a series of actions by the United States Supreme Court and by Congr...
The ease of becoming judgment proof in Texas, with liberal exemptions from execution of judgment, ma...
After decades of confusion, in 1991 the Supreme Court articulated a uniform federal limitations peri...
Securities regulation deals primarily with the laws preventing and providing remedies for fraud in t...
In the past, federal courts have been the primary forums for securities fraud litigation because the...
For more than a generation-between 1911 and 1933-securities sales in the United States were regulate...
This Article examines Congress’s decades-long attempt to ensure that securities class action lawsuit...
Recently due to the robust economy, the United States, including Texas, saw a significant increase i...
State law gives corporate managers extremely broad power to direct increasingly large pools of colle...
We propose that plaintiffs in securities fraud actions should use state inspections statutes to obta...
In the last fifteen years, Congress has enacted Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23, The Private Secu...
The Ohio Securities Act (“OSA”) was enacted in 1913 to “guard [ ] investors against fraudulent enter...
A plaintiff in securities fraud litigation usually has a whole arsenal of legal theories to pursue. ...
The Supreme Court’s decision in Dura Pharmaceuticals dramatically changed federal securities fraud l...
Recent actions by the United States Supreme Court and by Congress have reduced the number of avenues...
The decade of the 1990s produced a series of actions by the United States Supreme Court and by Congr...
The ease of becoming judgment proof in Texas, with liberal exemptions from execution of judgment, ma...
After decades of confusion, in 1991 the Supreme Court articulated a uniform federal limitations peri...
Securities regulation deals primarily with the laws preventing and providing remedies for fraud in t...
In the past, federal courts have been the primary forums for securities fraud litigation because the...
For more than a generation-between 1911 and 1933-securities sales in the United States were regulate...
This Article examines Congress’s decades-long attempt to ensure that securities class action lawsuit...
Recently due to the robust economy, the United States, including Texas, saw a significant increase i...
State law gives corporate managers extremely broad power to direct increasingly large pools of colle...
We propose that plaintiffs in securities fraud actions should use state inspections statutes to obta...
In the last fifteen years, Congress has enacted Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23, The Private Secu...
The Ohio Securities Act (“OSA”) was enacted in 1913 to “guard [ ] investors against fraudulent enter...
A plaintiff in securities fraud litigation usually has a whole arsenal of legal theories to pursue. ...
The Supreme Court’s decision in Dura Pharmaceuticals dramatically changed federal securities fraud l...