The Legal Intelligencer | Analysis
By Max Mitchell | February 1, 2021
"It may be anecdotal, but it could be a byproduct of a lot more money going through plaintiffs firms—mass tort money, bigger and bigger verdicts," Ostroff Injury Law attorney Jon Ostroff said. "When the pie gets bigger so do the problems."
By Amanda Bronstad | January 29, 2021
A court-appointed attorney has recommended that the brother of Tom Girardi serve as temporary conservator of his estate for limited purposes but not for him personally. The recommendation, in which the attorney interviewed Tom Girardi, comes ahead of a Monday hearing in a conservatorship petition filed by Robert Girardi, a dentist, who said his brother's condition "has sadly deteriorated to the point where he cannot care for himself without assistance."
By Michael A. Mora | January 28, 2021
Should the Securities and Exchange Commission move from its position of "actively monitoring" to investigating regulatory concerns, it could justify a move from Robinhood to halt trading.
By Amanda Bronstad | January 27, 2021
Tomorrow's hearing before the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation features last-minute changes in lawsuits against Google and the National Rifle Association.
By Amanda Bronstad | January 27, 2021
Monday's lawsuit accuses Abir Cohen Treyzon Salo, or the ACTS firm, of sending mass emails to former Girardi Keese clients with pending lawsuits over a 2015 gas leak in the Porter Ranch neighborhood of Los Angeles. ACTS founding partner Boris Treyzon says his firm has a Nov. 16 agreement with Girardi Keese to represent its clients.
By Aleeza Furman | January 27, 2021
Food delivery app DoorDash is using Benesch to defend against a false advertising class action, Stevens & Lee is representing a group of RBC Wealth Management-U.S. brokers in their countersuit against Morgan Stanley, and other work from midsize firms.
By Ross Todd | January 27, 2021
A federal judge found plaintiffs hadn't alleged that real estate finance company Velocity Financial could have known the extent of the coronavirus pandemic at the time of its January 2020 IPO—meaning there was no need for any disclosures about the pandemic.
By Ross Todd | January 27, 2021
A federal judge found plaintiffs hadn't alleged that real estate finance company Velocity Financial could have known the extent of the coronavirus pandemic at the time of its January 2020 IPO—meaning there was no need for any disclosures about the pandemic.
By Greg Sandoval | January 26, 2021
Ninth Circuit affirmed lower court ruling that projections made by Tesla's leaders turned out to be inaccurate but what they weren't was unlawful, thanks to safe harbor provisions.
By The Legal Intelligencer | January 26, 2021
In The Legal's Products Liability, Mass Torts and Class Action supplement, read about federal COVID-19 tort immunities, dresser tip-over litigation and the response to advancing technology in auto class actions.
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