By Michael A. Mora | June 16, 2020
If the class is certified, around 80,000 businesses could obtain compensation for their damages allegedly caused by the Florida-based power utility company.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Margaret A. Dale and Mark D. Harris | June 15, 2020
In their Corporate and Securities Litigation, Margaret A. Dale and Mark D. Harris discuss the most recent putative class action lawsuits related to COVID-19, and concludes by evaluating implications for future lawsuits.
By Katheryn Tucker | June 12, 2020
It would have taken more than $100 million to even refund a year of tuition for all the students who were unable to complete their law degrees, objectors argued. But those who brokered the agreement said they pulled in every dollar on the table.
By Jenna Greene | June 12, 2020
The decision "recognizes that plaintiffs must bring their claims in a state that has real connections to those claims," Seitz said. "As a result, state courts will not expend their judicial and financial resources on cases that have no connection to that state or its citizens."
By Katheryn Tucker | June 11, 2020
"Ten years of litigation, four appeals, completely lost it twice and had to reverse it," said Michael Terry Bondurant, Mixson & Elmore. "If there was ever a case where we had to earn our money, this was it."
By Aleeza Furman | June 11, 2020
Hodgson Russ represents the manufacturer of a nonstick pan that a customer claims is faulty, Poyner Spruill defended a Jehovah's Witnesses inmate's right to worship in prison, and other work from midsize firms.
By Amanda Bronstad | June 10, 2020
Two prominent African-American lawyers in mass torts, one for plaintiffs and one for defendants, share what the protests mean to them personally and professionally.
By Greg Land | June 10, 2020
Several cases around the country remain pending against the insurer after its 2018 decision to stop paying trail commissions to broker-dealers for variable annuities they marketed and serviced.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joseph M. McLaughlin and Shannon K. McGovern | June 10, 2020
A class should not be certified unless plaintiff establishes by a preponderance of the evidence that the process of distinguishing the injured claimants from the uninjured claimants will not entail highly individualized factual inquiries
New York Law Journal | Profile
By Amanda Bronstad | June 8, 2020
Attorneys Regina Calcaterra and Janine Pollack, former colleagues at Wolf Haldenstein, have launched Calcaterra Pollack with plans to focus on complex litigation, including class actions brought over COVID-19 issues.
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