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Mason Lawlor

Mason Lawlor

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May 04, 2022 | Law.com

1st Circuit: Lost Income Not Grounds for Injunction Against Hospital's Employee Vaccine Mandate

"Deprivation of income (both in the form of wages and of benefits) is a quintessential pocketbook injury, which money damages can remedy," the appeals court said.

By Mason Lawlor

3 minute read

May 03, 2022 | Law.com

Rejecting First Amendment Claims, 6th Circ. Says Cops Were Fired for Speech That 'Fell Squarely Within Their Job Duties'

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has ruled against two Tennessee police officers who sued the city after being fired for objecting to its proposed police reforms.

By Mason Lawlor

4 minute read

May 03, 2022 | Law.com

6th Circuit Says Landowner Has Standing to Challenge Plans to Remove Dam, Citing 'Risk of Future Harm'

A divided three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has followed a number of other federal courts in eminent domain litigation, giving legal standing to a landowner in Michigan to challenge plans to remove a dam near her property.

By Mason Lawlor

5 minute read

May 02, 2022 | Law.com

Federal Judge Asks State Court to Weigh in on COVID-19 Business Interruption Case

A large majority of courts nationwide have sided with insurers in the recent string of pandemic-driven business interruption cases. Nevertheless, a federal judge has asked the Maryland Court of Appeals to weigh in on whether the COVID-19 virus causes "physical loss or damage" to a property such that it triggers coverage.

By Mason Lawlor

4 minute read

April 29, 2022 | Law.com

6th Circuit: Employees' Consent to Arbitration Does Not Bind Retirement Plan in ERISA Class Action

Former Cintas employees Raymond Hawkins and Robin Lung filed their putative class action under Section 502(a)(2) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, alleging Cintas breached the fiduciary duties it owed to the company's retirement plan

By Mason Lawlor

3 minute read

April 28, 2022 | The Recorder

9th Circuit, Vacating District Court's Injunction, Allows California Department of Transportation to Clear Homeless Encampments

The California Department of Transportation was previously ordered to give homeless campers six months to relocate before clearing their encampments along the state's freeways. Now, however, Caltrans has gotten the go-ahead to clear out the encampments immediately, thanks to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit's reversal of a district court's injunction.

By Mason Lawlor

4 minute read

April 28, 2022 | Law.com

'A Vacuum of Training and Guidance': Maryland Federal Judge Allows Lawsuit Alleging Pattern of 'No-Knock' Raids to Proceed

"[The police department]'s systemic departure from the rule goes far in plausibly averring a pattern and practice claim," U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis of the District of Maryland said. "Additionally, that same year, [the department] executed such warrants in a vacuum of training and guidance."

By Mason Lawlor

3 minute read

April 27, 2022 | Law.com

Massachusetts Appeals Court Upholds Dismissal of State Election Fraud Claims Over Early and Mail-In Ballots

Candidates for state and federal offices in Massachusetts were hoping to move forward with a challenge seeking injunctive relief against the state's election laws, but a state appellate court has affirmed the Superior Court's decision to throw out the claim.

By Mason Lawlor

3 minute read

April 26, 2022 | Law.com

Class Action Allowed to Proceed Against Amusement Park Over COVID-19 Closures

Cedar Fair, which manages and operates popular amusement parks like Cedar Point in Sandusky, Ohio, and Kings Island near Cincinnati, may have to reimburse passholders for park closures caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

By Mason Lawlor

4 minute read