By P.J. D'Annunzio | January 25, 2015
Opening arguments in the first trial of Philadelphia's Risperdal mass-tort actions began Jan. 23 with attorneys squaring off over whether the drug's maker failed to warn patients about the risk of male breast growth associated with taking the medication.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | January 23, 2015
The state Supreme Court has agreed to hear argument in the case of two police officers who claimed they were subject to an insurance fraud scheme aimed at denying uninsured and underinsured motorist benefits.
By Saranac Hale Spencer | January 23, 2015
A $2.6 million suit filed by a bank against an insurer has survived a motion to dismiss in federal court in Pittsburgh.
By Christine Simmons | January 23, 2015
The criminal complaint alleging public corruption charges against Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver features two law firms: the prominent personal injury firm of Weitz & Luxenberg and a little-known two-person tax certiorari firm, Goldberg & Iryami.
By Carlos Harrison | January 23, 2015
Broward Circuit Judge Dennis Bailey said his sons' autism helps him "appreciate the frailty and complexity of the human condition," and makes him a better judge.
By Andrew Keshner | January 23, 2015
After a defense attorney assured a judge that he would vigorously defend his client, despite earlier comments, the judge nonetheless warned the lawyer of his professional responsibilities.
By Amaris Elliott-Engel | January 23, 2015
A Commercial Division judge has rejected a motion to disqualify a law firm from representing parties in a joint defense because "virtually all conflict waivers would be unenforceable" if the court did so.
By Ben Bedell | January 23, 2015
A woman's request to proceed anonymously in a lawsuit alleging negligent and fraudulent transmission of genital herpes by a former boyfriend was rejected Tuesday by a Manhattan appellate court.
By Mark Hamblett | January 22, 2015
Khalid al Fawwaz was a critical, top-level conspirator in Osama bin Laden's war against America, spreading the al Qaida leader's declarations of hate, training terrorists and leading the terror cell that bombed U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, a federal prosecutor told a jury Thursday.
By Saranac Hale Spencer | January 22, 2015
The Philadelphia Parking Authority will have to pay over $100,000 to cover the cost of the legal representation for persons who sued a division of the PPA over the number of taxicabs that are inaccessible to people in wheelchairs, under a federal magistrate judge's order.
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