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Amanda Bronstad

Amanda Bronstad

Amanda Bronstad is the ALM staff reporter covering class actions and mass torts nationwide. She writes the email dispatch Law.com Class Actions: Critical Mass. She is based in Los Angeles.

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March 10, 2011 | Daily Business Review

Katie Holmes' lawyer on defamation suit: 'We need to do something about this now.'

Katie Holmes filed a $50 million libel lawsuit on March 1 against American Media Inc., the publisher of Star Magazine, after the tabloid published an article in its Jan. 31 issue insinuating that she had a drug addiction.

By Amanda Bronstad

8 minute read

June 11, 2010 | National Law Journal

9th Circuit settles questions about disputes over script ownership

An appellate ruling involving a 2003 Tom Cruise movie clarified for the first time in 40 years how a writer of a finished script with copyrightable elements can successfully bring a contract claim against a studio for stealing his or her idea.

By Amanda Bronstad

4 minute read

November 06, 2007 | The Legal Intelligencer

As Calif. Wildfires Die Down, Lawsuits Might Be Igniting

Now that the recent wildfires in Southern California have died down, their aftermath could spark hundreds of lawsuits from homeowners.

By Amanda Bronstad

4 minute read

October 15, 2010 | Law.com

Beverly Hills Boutique Branches Out Into Litigation

Entertainment litigator Miles Feldman has left Liner Grode Stein Yankelevitz Sunshine Regenstreif & Taylor to join the Raines Law Group, which will relaunch as Raines Feldman, a boutique in Beverly Hills, Calif. The firm had focused on real estate, private equity and hospitality clients, but now will add entertainment and intellectual property litigation to its practice areas. "The reason I'm doing this is because I think this is the next phase: Smaller, very nimble firms that offer extremely high value," says Feldman.

By Amanda Bronstad

2 minute read

March 16, 2007 | New Jersey Law Journal

States Working To Counter Lag In Judges' Pay

States across the nation, struggling with the demoralizing impact of lagging pay for state judges, are proposing the first pay hikes for their jurists in years.

By Amanda Bronstad

9 minute read

July 09, 2010 | Law.com

Milbank Partner Goes It Alone to Escape the 'Big Firm Profit Model'

Gregory Evans, a litigation partner in Milbank's Los Angeles office, has left to form his own firm, Integer Law Corp., citing the "unbearable tension" between big law firm profit structures and the needs of clients who face increasing economic pressures. "When companies have been cutting so many employees and budgets, which include legal budgets, I have seen -- not just Milbank, but across the industry -- reluctance to adapt to what should be a new model of representing the legal interests of businesses," Evans said.

By Amanda Bronstad

3 minute read

December 10, 2009 | National Law Journal

Broadcom judge sets dismissal hearing

A federal judge is considering dismissing the federal government's stock options backdating case against a former Broadcom Corp. executive following numerous allegations of prosecutorial misconduct.

By Amanda Bronstad

6 minute read

July 21, 2010 | Corporate Counsel

Plaintiffs Winning Mixed Rulings in Mortgage-Backed Securities Litigation

Meet the man in the middle of all of those juicy shareholder suits against banks that issued mortgage-backed securities. Steven Toll, managing partner of Washington?s Cohen Milstein Sellers & Toll, talks about several cases in which his firm has been appointed lead counsel or co-lead counsel.

By Amanda Bronstad

6 minute read

September 26, 2011 | Texas Lawyer

Texas and Other States Get in on the MDL Action

The field of combat in the Toyota sudden-acceleration litigation is the Central District of California, where 300 cases have been coordinated in federal multidistrict litigation. But there are plenty of side skirmishes in state courts, which over the years have emulated the federal coordination system.

By Amanda Bronstad

7 minute read

July 26, 2010 | National Law Journal

Judge refuses to toss suit over Prius headlights

A federal judge in Los Angeles refused on Monday to throw out a class action against Toyota Motor Corp. over defective headlights on their Prius vehicles.

By Amanda Bronstad

4 minute read