Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Elisa Reiter and Daniel Pollack | September 27, 2024
A recent case in the Court of Appeal of Florida, First District, Hoover v. Peak, examined the context of the state's stalking statute.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Joe Fried and Michael Goldberg | September 27, 2024
The case, involving a child injured by an Amazon-contracted delivery driver, focused on how businesses use technology to direct and control the time, method and manner of work performed by contractors.
Litigation Daily | Quick Takes
By Ross Todd | September 27, 2024
Gary Robb and his team at Robb & Robb won a $116 million verdict for their clients, whose son drowned when a tour helicopter crashed and overturned in the East River in 2018.
By Sulaiman Abdur-Rahman | September 26, 2024
"Biogen's anticompetitive conduct, and the PBMs' participation in it, delayed and substantially diminished the sale of generic Tecfidera in the United States, and unlawfully enabled Biogen to sell Tecfidera and Vumerity at artificially inflated units and prices," according to the allegations in three complaints accusing Biogen of monopolizing the multiple sclerosis drug market.
By Michael A. Mora | September 26, 2024
"As laid out in Swan's complaint, the theft of Swan's trade secrets and confidential information is staggering and alarming," said Harris M. Mufson, a partner at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher.
By ALM Staff | September 26, 2024
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decisions editors.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Matthew T. Mangino | September 26, 2024
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court must decide whether the term "cruel punishment" is more expansive in the punishments it precludes than the term "cruel and unusual punishment."
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Steven D. Lustig | September 26, 2024
When something is referred to as a "knockoff" it typically implies that the knockoff product is similar in appearance to an earlier product and is unlawful. But that is not always the case. Indeed, there can be infringing knockoffs and noninfringing knockoffs. It depends on the facts and circumstances.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Lawrence J. "Skip" Persick | September 26, 2024
Looking specifically at the Velasquez case, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court granted discretionary review to clarify the role of Pennsylvania courts in deciding whether our courts could make the necessary findings to support SIJ status and, if so, what branch of our court system has the ability to make those determinations.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 26, 2024
At a final approval hearing on Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Benita Pearson said she would approve Norfolk Southern's $600 million class settlement over the 2023 derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.
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