Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | August 24, 2018
Standard Petroleum was dealt a legal blow by the Connecticut Supreme Court this week, which upheld a lower court ruling allowing class certification in a lawsuit alleging the company overcharged customers.
By Amanda Bronstad | August 23, 2018
Six separate lawsuits have been filed since The Wall Street Journal reported last month that the Justice Department was investigating whether media sales teams and station owners shared information with one another.
By Amanda Bronstad | August 23, 2018
Six separate lawsuits have been filed since The Wall Street Journal reported last month that the Justice Department was investigating whether media sales teams and station owners shared information with one another.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Craig R. Tractenberg | August 23, 2018
No-poach agreements contain clauses which prohibit the solicitation of employees. The party bound by such an agreement agrees not to compete with the employer for its employees and agrees not to solicit an existing employee to leave.
By Amanda Bronstad | August 22, 2018
U.S. District Senior Judge Mark Wolf appointed a special master to look into potential overbilling, after a $75 million fee request by the three lead plaintiffs firms.
By Zach Schlein | August 22, 2018
Jordan A. Shaw, partner at Fort Lauderdale-based firm Zebersky Payne, and Ashley Keller, founding partner at Chicago litigation firm Keller Lenkner, filed a putative class action lawsuitalleging several pharmaceutical companies caused the price of medical insurance to rise in Florida due to their misconduct.
By Amanda Bronstad | August 22, 2018
Why did a federal judge in the Anthem data breach case award more than $30 million to plaintiffs lawyers with whom she was “deeply disappointed?” There's a lot of amicus support for lead paint companies petitioning the U.S. Supreme Court. And read on for an update on multi district litigation over EpiPen pricing.
By Jenna Greene | August 21, 2018
When you've got a 6-year-old who suddenly can't breathe, the notion of an EpiPen as a profit center becomes obscene.
By Michael Booth | August 21, 2018
"We conclude that the complaint should have been dismissed with prejudice because the sales receipts are not a violation of the TCCWNA, and they are not contracts or notices under the act," said Appellate Division Judges Thomas Sumners Jr. and Scott Moynihan.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Martin Flumenbaum and Brad S. Karp | August 21, 2018
In their Second Circuit Review column, Martin Flumenbaum and Brad S. Karp explain that the Second Circuit has now made clear that, for purposes of class action certification, named plaintiffs only need standing for their own claims.
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