By Amanda Bronstad | March 11, 2019
The class action, which alleged that the U.S. Soccer Federation pays women players less than their male counterparts, caps a lengthy feud over pay.
By Ross Todd | March 11, 2019
U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken in Oakland on Friday issued an injunction barring the NCAA and its member schools and conferences from capping education-related benefits such as computers, science equipment, postgraduate scholarships, and aid to study abroad to Division I women's and men's basketball players and football players at schools in the Football Bowl Subdivision.
By Ross Todd | March 11, 2019
U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken in Oakland on Friday issued an injunction barring the NCAA and its member schools and conferences from capping education-related benefits such as computers, science equipment, postgraduate scholarships, and aid to study abroad to Division I women's and men's basketball players and football players at schools in the Football Bowl Subdivision.
By Raychel Lean | March 11, 2019
A nationwide putative class action lawsuit accuses the country's largest trade association and four leading broker franchisors of developing practices that stifle competition and allow for hiked commission prices. But the companies call the allegations "baseless."
By Katheryn Tucker | March 11, 2019
Bickerstaff has alleged that the bank's $36 overdraft fee for sometimes tiny debits amounts to unreasonably high interest rates on small loans. As many as 400,000 customers could be class members, the lawsuit says, potentially costing the bank tens if not hundreds of millions of dollars.
By Katheryn Tucker | March 11, 2019
Bickerstaff has alleged that the bank's $36 overdraft fee for sometimes tiny debits amounts to unreasonably high interest rates on small loans. As many as 400,000 customers could be class members, the lawsuit says, potentially costing the bank tens if not hundreds of millions of dollars.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 8, 2019
In a case that intertwined the unpredictability of sports with how much fans needed to know about an athlete's injuries, Ninth Circuit Judge Jacqueline Nguyen asked: “Where do you draw the line?”
By Amanda Bronstad | March 8, 2019
In a case that intertwined the unpredictability of sports with how much fans needed to know about an athlete's injuries, Ninth Circuit Judge Jacqueline Nguyen asked: “Where do you draw the line?”
By Charles Toutant | March 8, 2019
Applying "Spokeo," the Court of Appeals said a plaintiff whose suit accused J. Crew of violating the Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003 suffered no concrete injury and therefore lacked standing to seek damages.
By Colby Hamilton | March 8, 2019
U.S. District Judge Lorna Schofield approved the fee request March 7.
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