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Formation and Operation of a Nonprofit Corporation
 
Nonprofit corporations are a useful tool for organizing for charitable, educational, religious, literary, or scientific purposes while reducing the risk of individual liability in accomplishing those goals. A nonprofit corporation is often referred to as a 501(c)(3) corporation due to the tax code provision under which most nonprofit corporations are considered exempt from federal taxation.More...
 
DUTY OF CARE--CORPORATE DIRECTORS
 
OVERVIEWMore...
 
Off-Exchange Foreign Currency Trading
 
Trading in foreign currency futures and options contracts by retail customers outside of an organized exchange is unlawful unless the party offering the futures and options contracts is a regulated entity described in the Commodity Exchange Act enforced by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. More...
 
Sarbanes-Oxley
 
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (Act), generally applicable to publicly traded companies with registered securities and are subject to reporting requirements under federal law, specifically addresses the issue of whistleblower protection in a corporate context. The Act's employee whistleblower provision was modeled after other federal statutes containing whistleblower protections (for example, protections that apply to workers in the nuclear energy industry. More...
 
Business & Corporate Entities: Corporations
 
Professional Corporation BasicsMore...
 
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