By Ross Todd | March 5, 2018
The lawsuit filed March 2 marks the second time in as many days that the company has been hit with a class action in the Northern District of California.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | March 5, 2018
Ride-sharing giant Uber violated Pennsylvania's consumer protection law when it failed to promptly disclose that a data breach occurred in late 2016, and that mistake should cost the company at least $13.5 million, state Attorney General Josh Shapiro has claimed in a newly filed lawsuit.
By Samantha Joseph | March 5, 2018
"These cases ... have a bigger meaning than just moving money from one side of the room to the other," said plaintiffs' co-counsel Stuart Ratzan.
By Jenna Greene | March 5, 2018
Lawyers from plaintiffs powerhouse Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd called out “a cadre of firms responsible for a dramatic explosion of federal deal litigation,” and urged a federal judge in San Francisco to reject a fee request by fellow plaintiffs' counsel.
By Marcia Coyle | March 2, 2018
The U.S. Justice Department tells the Supreme Court it doesn't need any guidance about "cy pres" settlements—not after U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions last year adopted a new policy that would preclude such provisions in future deals.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 1, 2018
Plaintiffs firm Edelson PC has asked a federal judicial panel to consolidate class actions brought over the 2014 collapse of the bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox after a federal judge last year dismantled its case under the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Bristol-Myers Squibb v. Superior Court of California.
By Samantha Joseph | March 1, 2018
The lawsuit over the 2017 World OutGames is pending before U.S. District Judge Kathleen M. Williams in Miami.
By R. Robin McDonald | March 1, 2018
Equifax on Thursday expanded the number of consumers whose financial data and personal information have been compromised to a breathtaking 148 million.
By Meredith Hobbs | February 28, 2018
Neither Phi Nguyen nor Jess Davis, the Atlanta lawyers who spearheaded the case, had any experience in immigration law when they got started on a massive national class action on behalf of Vietnamese refugees.
By Ross Todd | Erin Mulvaney | February 28, 2018
But U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar said at a hearing Tuesday that if he denies class certification, he's likely to do so without prejudice.
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