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Saranac Hale Spencer

Saranac Hale Spencer

March 10, 2015 | The Legal Intelligencer

Children's Tylenol Maker Agrees to Pay $25M Fine

The Johnson & Johnson subsidiary that makes children's Tylenol has pleaded guilty to a criminal charge for its failure to correct faulty manufacturing practices, agreeing to pay $25 million to resolve the matter.

By Saranac Hale Spencer

3 minute read

March 09, 2015 | The Legal Intelligencer

DA Let Out of Abu-Jamal Speech Suit; Kane Isn't

Philadelphia District Attorney R. Seth Williams got out of a suit challenging a new state law that forbids convicts from causing "mental anguish" to victims by speaking about the crime, but Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane wasn't let out.

By Saranac Hale Spencer

3 minute read

March 09, 2015 | The Legal Intelligencer

DA Let Out of Abu-Jamal Speech Suit; Kane Isn't

Philadelphia District Attorney R. Seth Williams got out of a suit challenging a new state law that forbids convicts from causing "mental anguish" to victims by speaking about the crime, but Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane wasn't let out.

By Saranac Hale Spencer

3 minute read

March 09, 2015 | The Legal Intelligencer

Jury Finds in Favor of Cop in Photo Case

A federal jury on March 6 returned a verdict in favor of a police officer in the first of several similar cases brought by the American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of citizens who were arrested after photographing or observing police behavior.

By Saranac Hale Spencer

4 minute read

March 09, 2015 | The Legal Intelligencer

In Med Mal Lawsuit, Judge Clears Up Intersection of MCARE, Tort Claims Act

The federal government could end up paying millions of dollars in a medical malpractice suit, just as a privately funded hospital would, a federal judge has ruled in a case that clarifies how state and federal law intersect on the issue.

By Saranac Hale Spencer

5 minute read

March 06, 2015 | The Legal Intelligencer

In Med Mal Lawsuit, Judge Clears Up Intersection of MCARE, Tort Claims Act

The federal government could end up paying millions of dollars in a medical malpractice suit, just as a privately funded hospital would, a federal judge has ruled in a case that clarifies how state and federal law intersect on the issue.

By Saranac Hale Spencer

5 minute read

March 06, 2015 | The Legal Intelligencer

Jury Finds in Favor of Cop in Photo Case

A federal jury on March 6 returned a verdict in favor of a police officer in the first of several similar cases brought by the American Civil Liberties Union on behalf of citizens who were arrested after photographing or observing police behavior.

By Saranac Hale Spencer

4 minute read

March 05, 2015 | The Legal Intelligencer

Civil Rights Case Begins Over Photographing an Arrest

Three-and-a-half years after Coulter Loeb was arrested while he took photos of a Philadelphia police officer removing a homeless woman from Rittenhouse Square, his civil rights case is in front of a federal jury.

By Saranac Hale Spencer

4 minute read

March 04, 2015 | The Legal Intelligencer

Civil Rights Case Begins Over Photographing an Arrest

Three-and-a-half years after Coulter Loeb was arrested while he took photos of a Philadelphia police officer removing a homeless woman from Rittenhouse Square, his civil rights case is in front of a federal jury.

By Saranac Hale Spencer

4 minute read

March 04, 2015 | Delaware Business Court Insider

Laster on Dole Food's Expert: No Ears, No Voice, No Witness

Corporations are not people and they can't testify like them, the Delaware Court of Chancery has ruled.

By Saranac Hale Spencer

3 minute read