By Ellen Bardash | January 11, 2022
Two Ohio counties that are seeking purely economic damages in the case didn't prove what costs were incurred by those who treated individuals affected by opioid use, Chief Justice Collins J. Seitz Jr. concluded.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | January 11, 2022
The return to COVID-driven trial uncertainty in some districts has left not only attorneys in a lurch but also judges, many of whom already are facing massive caseloads and trial backlogs exacerbated by the first court closures in 2020.
By Charles Toutant | January 10, 2022
"The court is not aware of any reason why it should not order the parties to show cause why the amount of attorneys fees that it intends to award today should not be used to offset the amount of attorneys fees owed in the other matter," U.S. District Judge Noel Hillman said.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Kristie Rearick | January 10, 2022
It is essential that the bar have a substantial number of skilled trial lawyers to try a case in open court. We are operating with the restrictions of the COVID pandemic, and the number of trial lawyers is diminishing; this is war time, let us solve this problem.
By Ellen Bardash | January 7, 2022
U.S. District Judge Leonard P. Stark's decision to remand the case to Delaware Superior Court marks a win for state Attorney General Kathy Jennings, who first chose the state court as the venue for the complaint filed against more than 30 fossil fuel giants.
By Avalon Zoppo | January 7, 2022
The panel seemed poised to certify a question regarding enforcement of the abortion law. Judges Edith Jones and Stuart Kyle Duncan appeared to support Texas' request, while Judge Stephen Higginson opposed it.
By Meghann M. Cuniff | January 5, 2022
The lawsuit's defendants include four sheriff's deputies who photographed human remains for what sheriff's officials have said was no legitimate investigative reason.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | January 5, 2022
Late last month, two group of Pennsylvanians—one backed by lawyers from Jenner & Block and Reed Smith, the other backed by lawyers from Ballard Spahr, Perkins Coie and the Elias Law Group—petitioned the state Supreme Court to intervene in the congressional map-making process using its King's Bench powers.
By Avalon Zoppo | January 4, 2022
"It does seem to me important for judges to know if the real power behind the throne is something that would require their recusal, require them to think about that or check their stock ownership," a D.C. Circuit judge said.
By Tom McParland | January 4, 2022
"He is in the category of any person not entitled to use the settlement," said U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan of the Southern District of New York.
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