New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Herbert Rubin | July 31, 2018
His work ethic, boundless energy in grappling with legal challenges and a “roll-up-the-sleeves” attitude projected inspiration to those of us who were privileged to hear his counsel.
By Amanda Bronstad | July 27, 2018
A federal judge in California has appointed two lawyers to lead class actions brought against Facebook Inc. over the Cambridge Analytica scandal over misuse of user data.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Amanda Bronstad | July 26, 2018
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit's decision earlier this week, in a matter of first impression, found that a class representative has standing to sue in federal court on behalf of a class of consumers subject to laws outside her own state.
By Amanda Bronstad | July 26, 2018
An appeals court has approved a class action settlement about allegedly defective Remington rifles—one that attorneys general in 10 states opposed…
By Ross Todd | July 25, 2018
Judge James Donato wrote that Fitbit's refusal to pay arbitration fees after routing a consumer case to arbitration "bolstered the perception that arbitration is where consumer lawsuits go to die."
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Howard W. Gordon and Carlos A. Lievano III | July 23, 2018
The Supreme Court's decision on June 21, 2018, South Dakota v. Wayfair, Inc., No. 17-494, 583 U.S. __ (2018), removed the physical presence rule in favor of an analysis that is better aligned with our modern commerce clause jurisprudence.
By C. Ryan Barber | July 20, 2018
The settlement is the CFPB's first in a pending case under the tenure of the CFPB's interim leader, Mick Mulvaney, who has criticized past enforcement actions for “pushing the envelope.”
By Amanda Bronstad | July 20, 2018
The American Association for Justice's new president, Elise Sanguinetti, came on board this month right after President Donald Trump nominated Judge…
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Cliff Rieders | July 19, 2018
Preventable medical errors are routinely covered up by health care professionals who do not always put the truth in the medical records or address poor medical care in the context of peer review. In Pennsylvania, as in most states, peer review cannot be disclosed even in litigation.
By Amanda Bronstad | July 16, 2018
U.S. Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh has a limited record on class actions and mass torts, but many of his rulings favor businesses, lawyers say, raising the likelihood that he would favor the defense in such cases.
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