By Greg Land | March 29, 2018
The plaintiff said a minor traffic accident led to a cascading series of events that left her hospitalized with kidney failure due to an infections that traveled from her left wrist to her right knee.
By Andrew Denney | March 29, 2018
The government alleges the borrowers who took out the loans were less creditworthy than Barclays led investors and rating agencies to believe, and that more than half of the loans defaulted.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Donna M. Marcus | March 29, 2018
The #MeToo movement has brought the issue of sexual abuse and sexual assault out of hiding and into the public view. In the past, victims of sexual abuse or assault often felt silenced and ashamed and, as a result, the crimes went unreported or uncharged by authorities.
By Katheryn Tucker | March 28, 2018
The agreement ends a dispute that started soon after Joshua Martin, then 19, was attacked outside of Six Flags on the evening of July 3, 2007, while he was waiting for a bus to take him home.
By Katheryn Tucker | March 28, 2018
The plaintiffs counsel says letting the opinion stand as good law will affect all accident cases in Georgia where defendants say they didn't mean to do it. The defense says the appeal was meritless.
By Colby Hamilton | March 28, 2018
The company allegedly got paid for long-term care services it had contracted out for nearly 200 enrollees, even as some of the patients never received any of the services.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | March 28, 2018
In a loss for the struggling taxi industry, a federal appeals court has ruled that Uber's entry into the Philadelphia transportation market did not run afoul of antitrust laws.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 28, 2018
The Fourth Circuit cited a 2017 U.S. Supreme Court decision from last year that struck down a procedural tactic used by plaintiffs to get their appeals heard.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Bradley M. Wanner and Andrew J. Orenstein | March 28, 2018
The true impact of 'Newcomb' will only be clear as the lower courts apply the new substantial prejudice test in the future.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Andrew Lavoott Bluestone | March 28, 2018
It has been almost four years since 'Grace' was decided. Legal malpractice litigation continues at its typical pace, and the defense bar is aware of the implications of plaintiff's appeal status. Our earlier confident expectoration of a spike in the use of 'Grace' has not yet materialized.
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