By Jim Saunders | September 25, 2018
The ruling by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit dealt with what is known as “force-placed insurance,” which occurs when people with mortgages do not buy property-insurance coverage.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 24, 2018
Facebook's content moderators viewed images of "child abuse, rape, torture, bestiality, beheadings, suicide, murder" as part of their jobs.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 24, 2018
Facebook Inc.'s content moderators had to see videos and images of "child abuse, rape, torture, bestiality, beheadings, suicide, murder."
By Amanda Bronstad | September 24, 2018
Facebook Inc.'s content moderators had to see videos and images of "child abuse, rape, torture, bestiality, beheadings, suicide, murder."
By Raychel Lean | September 21, 2018
Eduardo Maura of Ayala Law in Miami has filed a class action lawsuit against the owners of Miami's Mall of the Americas, and claims "the sentiment is unanimous" among small business owners that the conditions on their side of the mall are "unlivable."
By Amanda Bronstad | September 21, 2018
Yahoo's attorney and lead plaintiffs' counsel told U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in the multidistrict litigation in federal court in California that both sides had reached an “agreement in principle.”
By Colby Hamilton | September 21, 2018
U.S. District Judge Analisa Torres found that the depositions of opt-in members showed the consistencies needed to certify the class.
By Ross Todd | September 21, 2018
The court will review a decision from June by a federal judge in Seattle who found there were no uniform policies or job descriptions that tied together the thousands of women working in technical positions at Microsoft across multiple states who were part of the proposed class.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 20, 2018
The panel rejected the argument of Public Counsel, which represented two plaintiffs seeking arbitration of their Miami class action against JPay, that the question was merely procedural in nature.
By Charles Toutant | September 20, 2018
The Third Circuit ruled that the company's 2014 restatement of accounting results, which reduced 2011-2013 pretax income by $215 million and net income by $132 million, provided "at most, some inference of scienter but not a strong inference" on the part of three company executives.
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