The Legal Intelligencer | Investigation|News
By Max Mitchell | January 25, 2018
Two former Philadelphia assistant district attorneys have agreed to take leadership positions in the office of new City Controller Rebecca Rhynhart.
By The Legal Intelligencer | January 25, 2018
The Legal Intelligencer is accepting nominations in 10 categories this year, including four new categories geared exclusively toward firms with fewer than 200 lawyers.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Sharon M. Porcellio | January 25, 2018
In her Western District Roundup, columnist Sharon M. Porcellio discusses the recent decision in 'L.M. Sessler Excavating', in which the court considered an issue of first impression: whether the pleading standard articulated in 'Twombly' and 'Iqbal' is the proper measure for pleading a claim of direct patent infringement.
By Greg Land | January 25, 2018
Everest Indemnity said it was never told about the underlying accident, law suit or default judgment until the company it insured was hit with a $3.3 million default judgment.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Edward T. Kang | January 25, 2018
Who in civil litigation does not love a good RICO claim? Its boundaries are seemingly endless, and in the case of Harvey Weinstein—perhaps one of the most vilified defendants on the planet right now—there is the possibility of catastrophic implications, as if being the face of an entire movement (#MeToo) is not bad enough.
By Max Mitchell | January 25, 2018
A case taken up by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court could shed some light on what kind of evidence municipalities can use in efforts to block an oil and gas drilling project.
By Andrew Denney | January 24, 2018
The inflatable rat was set up outside the courthouse after it was revealed a former Staten Island clerk was secretly recording conversations with judges and other staff.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. Dannunzio | January 24, 2018
Plaintiffs "did not have the burden to prove that Lehigh County was oppressive to certain individuals, and such evidence was irrelevant to the inquiry herein," the court said.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | January 24, 2018
Out-of-work Pennsylvanians who drive for a ride-hailing service in their spare time are not automatically ineligible for unemployment benefits, a Pennsylvania appellate court has ruled.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | January 24, 2018
A Law Weekly tally of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania's work product over the last two years shows that its seven justices like to display an independent streak, and lawyers who looked at the findings stressed that the high court as a whole tends to be unpredictable.
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