The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | December 6, 2017
A central defendant in Philadelphia's pelvic mesh mass tort has lost its bid to have more than 100 cases filed by out-of-state plaintiffs tossed from the jurisdiction.
By Andrew Denney | December 5, 2017
A lawyer for President Donald Trump argued before a state judge in Manhattan on Tuesday that Trump's denial of accusations by a former contestant on “The Apprentice” that Trump groped her a decade ago—which she had announced publicly a few weeks before the 2016 election—amounted to fiery campaign rhetoric, and could not therefore be construed as defamatory.
By Colby Hamilton | December 5, 2017
Management for the New York County Defender Services is accused of dismissing claims of harassment by a staff attorney, and then retaliating against her after she says she officially filed a report against the supervisor.
By Greg Land | December 5, 2017
A Walton County jury delivered a post-apportionment award of $660,000 to a man injured after he stopped his vehicle for a Walton EMC repair crew working on downed utility poles and power lines, and was rear-ended by another driver.
By Caroline Spiezio | December 4, 2017
An Uber lawyer admitted that an email about the letter sat unread in his email inbox for months prior to the latest kerfuffle.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | December 4, 2017
The Commonwealth Court has determined that Gov. Tom Wolf did not need to have cause for removing the former chairman of the School Reform Commission from his post.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | December 4, 2017
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania is set to deliberate on what standards colleges should adhere to in order to satisfy their duty of care to student-athletes.
By Colby Hamilton | December 4, 2017
A woman claims the cable news company and its former host breached their settlement agreement by making false, defamatory statements after a New York Times story identified her as one of Bill O'Reilly's harassment accusers.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jonathan D. Lupkin | December 1, 2017
On Oct. 26, 2017, the New York Office of Court Administration approved an amendment to the Commercial Division Rules to include a sample choice of law clause for parties to include in a contract, which clause was added as a new Appendix to the Rules. Jonathan D. Lupkin discusses the background and purpose of the amendment, which becomes effective on Jan. 1, 2018.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Lizzy McLellan | November 30, 2017
The lawyers say ex-DA Castor's claims can't survive while underlying defamation litigation is pending.
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