Lowenstein Sandler represented Coya Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: COYA), a clinical-stage biotechnology company developing proprietary therapies to enhance the function of regulatory T cells, in the closing of its initial public offering of 3,050,00...
Lowenstein served as antitrust merger clearance counsel to ProFrac Holding Corp. (NASDAQ: ACDC) ("ProFrac") in the closing of its acquisition of REV Energy Holdings, LLC, a privately owned pressure pumping service provider with operations in the...
Law360 Pulse includes comments from Lowenstein Chair and Managing Partner Gary M. Wingens in its article on the firm’s eight new partners and 14 new counsel; Wingens says: "We are delighted to welcome these talented lawyers to our partnership. These attorneys have distinguished themselves with their extraordinary commitment to our clients, colleagues and communities in unprecedented times. They have also consistently strengthened our firm through their commitment to our firm's values." New partner Craig Dashiell of Lowenstein’s Business Litigation and Class Action Litigation groups adds: “I look forward to carrying on the tradition of advocacy and public service for which Lowenstein litigators are known, as well as continuing to help my clients achieve their business goals." Bloomberg Law, Reuters, NJBiz, and ROI-NJ also reported Lowenstein’s recent promotions.
Lowenstein Sandler has announced that eight lawyers have been elected to the firm partnership beginning in 2023. They are: Sabrina Cua, Craig Dashiell, Nicole Fulfree, Brendan J. Koeth, Kimberly E. Lomot, Sophia Mokotoff, Tracy A. Snow, and Kristi...
Doreen M. Edelman, partner and Chair of the firm’s Global Trade & National Security practice, is quoted in Law360 on trends to watch for in international trade in 2023, such as the Biden administration’s creation of new forums and coalitions over traditional free trade agreements, and increased scrutiny of outbound foreign investments. "It's already here in little teeny bits," she said, citing the CHIPS Act guardrail provisions. Edelman references Biden’s recent CFIUS executive order as “putting everyone on notice" of the government’s more expansive approach of looking at “where your components are coming from, where your technology's coming from, not only who's investing in it, who's going to get it, and what you're going to do with it in the future.”