By ALM Staff | June 21, 2023
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By Michael A. Mora | June 20, 2023
"I owned a total of 4,000 Voyager tokens and sold a total of about 400 tokens," said Mark Cuban, a defendant in the Voyager Digital Ltd. class action. "So the concept of insider trading, particularly when there's no conversation with the CEO around that time, is ridiculous."
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Richard N. Sheinis and Lisa Jaffee | June 20, 2023
More class actions are being filed, and this is happening more quickly after notification of the breach, sometimes with relatively fewer class members, and less personal information being accessed or disclosed in the breach.
By Amanda Bronstad | June 20, 2023
In multidistrict litigation dockets created in 2022, about 13% of plaintiffs lawyers appointed to leadership posts were not white, according to Law.com's exclusive data. That's down from the 16% in 2021, and 14% in 2020, but up from 2016 to 2019, when white attorneys dominated with 95% of appointments.
By Alaina Lancaster | June 16, 2023
The State Bar of California filed notices of disciplinary charges Wednesday against former Girardi Keese lawyers David Lira, who is also Girardi's son-in-law, and Keith Griffin.
By Ross Todd | June 16, 2023
The proposed settlement announced this week comes shortly after another $75 million deal with Deutsche Bank, another financial institution accused of turning a blind eye while providing financial services that enabled Jeffrey Epstein's sex-trafficking ring.
By Hugo Guzman | June 15, 2023
"These lawsuits are a case study of what's going on throughout the United States, and it's illustrating and bringing into focus certain pressure points," Duane Morris partner Gerald Maatman, Jr. said.
By Amanda Bronstad | June 14, 2023
A jury in Oregon came back with nearly $18 million in punitive damages to a $72 million verdict it awarded on June 9 to 17 named plaintiffs in a class action over wildfires in 2020.
By Ellen Bardash | June 14, 2023
Delaware courts have touched on the issue before, ruling on what type of exposure doesn't count as an injury, but the Croda case is the first to ask the high court to concretely state whether exposure leading to increased risk of disease is enough on its own.
By Charles Toutant | June 14, 2023
Courier services used to scrap their delivery vehicles after driving them for about 350,000 miles to avoid liability, but in about 2011 FedEx began reselling its vehicles instead of destroying them, according to the suit.
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