By Colby Hamilton | November 21, 2017
The panel agreed with the district court that the prima facie cases were not made on the claims.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Michael Marciano | November 21, 2017
Personal-injury attorney Patricia Cruz Fragoso of Danbury's Ventura Law has been appointed to serve on the Connecticut Judicial Branch's Access to Justice Commission.
By Andrew Denney | November 17, 2017
The United States and other Western countries in recent years have taken a tougher approach to a worldwide refugee crisis that has grown to affect 65 million people, the greatest number displaced from their homelands since the wake of World War II.
By Erin Mulvaney | November 17, 2017
A federal magistrate judge has denied an effort by PricewaterhouseCoopers to seal the number of would-be class members in an age discrimination suit that claims the accounting and consulting firm unlawfully struck older job applicants from employment consideration. The plaintiff's attorneys estimated that some 14,000 potential job applicants over age 40 could be part of the affected class.
By Jim Turner | November 16, 2017
Mary McLeod Bethune is getting support in both chambers of the Legislature as a replacement for a Confederate general who has long represented Florida in the U.S. Capitol.
By Katheryn Tucker | November 16, 2017
“Last year, the United States Penitentiary of Atlanta unlawfully discriminated against Mrs. Ragland because of her Christian beliefs when you demanded that she remove her head covering before she was permitted to visit her brother," ACLU of Georgia lawyers said.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Ben Seal | November 16, 2017
A Pennsylvania State Police trooper acting within the scope of his employment is immune from suit under the doctrine of sovereign immunity, even if his actions cause intentional harm, the Commonwealth Court has ruled.
By Colby Hamilton | November 15, 2017
Following on a recent district court order denying the Trump administration's motion to dismiss, plaintiffs in the underlying suit asked the Second Circuit to dispense with the government's mandamus petition pending before the appellate court.
By Charles Toutant | November 15, 2017
An Englewood ordinance designed to deter "sidewalk counseling" of women entering an abortion clinic violates the First Amendment, a New Jersey federal judge has ruled.
By Andrew Denney | November 14, 2017
A federal jury in Manhattan awarded on Tuesday a $2.2 million verdict to the family of a mentally disturbed man who was shot and killed in his home by New York City police officers in 2012.
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