(Excerpt) This Note argues that courts should return to using a holistic approach, similar to the traditional “conducts” and “effects” test previously used by courts to analyze extraterritorial securities and commodities claims, to assess claims brought under the CEA. Furthermore, this Note argues that both the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and private individuals including foreign plaintiffs, should be permitted to bring these claims to uphold Congress’s intent in establishing a regulatory regime and maintaining the integrity of the international derivatives market. Part I discusses the history of derivative regulation and how both court decisions and statutory changes have created the potential for confusion when asserting causes o...
The exact reach of the Defend Trade Secrets Act’s extraterritoriality provision has yet to be interp...
The U.S. Supreme Court recently created uncertainty in the over-the-counter derivative securities ma...
While international securities transactions have become the norm in today\u27s globalized economy, s...
(Excerpt) This Note argues that courts should return to using a holistic approach, similar to the tr...
The U.S. Supreme Court in Morrison held that Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act did not apply extrate...
[Excerpt] “As securities fraud has grown increasingly transnational, it has become necessary to expa...
In Morrison v. National Australia Bank, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June 2010 that securities fr...
This Article reviews customer rights and remedies now available under the CEA. Specifically, part II...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
In August 2019, the Second Circuit ruled in Prime International Trading, Ltd. v BP P.L.C. that plain...
The article discusses the expansion of the U.S. legislation the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) regardi...
This Article reviews the conduct and effects tests and the Supreme Court‘s decision in Morrison. It ...
This Note examines the various avenues of redress available to the defrauded commodity futures inves...
In 2010 the Supreme Court addressed the extraterritorial application of U.S. securities law in Morri...
This Note argues that the conduct-and-effects test set out in Dodd-Frank should not extend to privat...
The exact reach of the Defend Trade Secrets Act’s extraterritoriality provision has yet to be interp...
The U.S. Supreme Court recently created uncertainty in the over-the-counter derivative securities ma...
While international securities transactions have become the norm in today\u27s globalized economy, s...
(Excerpt) This Note argues that courts should return to using a holistic approach, similar to the tr...
The U.S. Supreme Court in Morrison held that Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act did not apply extrate...
[Excerpt] “As securities fraud has grown increasingly transnational, it has become necessary to expa...
In Morrison v. National Australia Bank, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June 2010 that securities fr...
This Article reviews customer rights and remedies now available under the CEA. Specifically, part II...
Article published in the Michigan State University School of Law Student Scholarship Collection
In August 2019, the Second Circuit ruled in Prime International Trading, Ltd. v BP P.L.C. that plain...
The article discusses the expansion of the U.S. legislation the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) regardi...
This Article reviews the conduct and effects tests and the Supreme Court‘s decision in Morrison. It ...
This Note examines the various avenues of redress available to the defrauded commodity futures inves...
In 2010 the Supreme Court addressed the extraterritorial application of U.S. securities law in Morri...
This Note argues that the conduct-and-effects test set out in Dodd-Frank should not extend to privat...
The exact reach of the Defend Trade Secrets Act’s extraterritoriality provision has yet to be interp...
The U.S. Supreme Court recently created uncertainty in the over-the-counter derivative securities ma...
While international securities transactions have become the norm in today\u27s globalized economy, s...