New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Shepard Goldfein and Karen Hoffman Lent | December 10, 2018
Antitrust Trade and Practice columnists Shepard Goldfein and Karen Hoffman Lent analyze four potential Supreme Court decisions in 'Apple v. Pepper', a case in which a putative class of iPhone owners are suing Apple for monopolizing, or attempting to monopolize, the market for iPhone applications.
By Vaishali Rao | December 10, 2018
State AGs have their work cut out for them. Besides suing the federal government in record numbers (as they have done in the last two years), and continuing to hold businesses accountable for the opioids epidemic, the following trends are ones to follow.
By Catherine Wilson | December 10, 2018
Most Effective Lawyers: Class action — The Podhurst Orseck team coordinated the work of more than two dozen law firms in class actions against automakers that used recalled Takata air bags.
By Ross Todd | December 6, 2018
"I ignore these things as I think most people do," says Mike Arias, founding partner of Arias Sanguinetti Wang & Torrijos and new president of the largest state-level plaintiffs lawyer group in the country, of the report ranking CA the country's number one "Judicial Hellhole."
By Amanda Bronstad | December 6, 2018
Plaintiffs lawyers, however, consider the Cambridge Analytica scandal "the tip of the iceberg" in Facebook's "willful pursuit of generating revenue at the expense of its users.”
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | December 6, 2018
U.S. District Chief Judge Joy Flowers Conti of the Western District of Pennsylvania on Tuesday affirmed an arbitration award in favor of plaintiff Betty Frison and against Davison Design & Development.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | December 6, 2018
Though a 2016 Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling in two consolidated cases said debt collection lawyers can be sued for excessive fees in foreclosure actions, the state Superior Court has now held in one of those cases that the plaintiffs still do not have a cause of action because their mortgage was too large to qualify under the version of the Pennsylvania Loan Interest and Protection Law in effect at the time it was executed.
New Jersey Law Journal | Analysis
By Michael H. Reed | December 5, 2018
Does the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in 'Bristol Myers Squibb' apply to class actions?
By C. Ryan Barber | December 5, 2018
Seth Frotman, the CFPB's former student loan ombudsman, said the deposition would set a “bad precedent” that would deter people from taking government posts.
By Katheryn Tucker | December 5, 2018
Attorneys general from 41 states, including New Jersey, announced that they reached a settlement with debt buyer and collector Encore Capital Group Inc., and subsidiaries Midland Credit Management Inc. and Midland Funding.
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