By Colleen Murphy | September 27, 2023
"As evidenced by the defendants briefing in their oral arguments today, our state legislature clearly intended section 2.11 to apply to a very specific category of consumer frauds, namely specific acts in misnaming or otherwise misleading customers as to the identity of food on restaurant menus," Alex R. Daniel, who argued for amicus curiae New Jersey Civil Justice Institute, said.
By Chris O'Malley | September 26, 2023
The National Federation of Independent Businesses is supportive but asks the agency to "tread lightly."
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | September 26, 2023
The award stemmed from an Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection case that was filed in 2008, and eventually came before the Superior Court four times.
By Adolfo Pesquera | September 26, 2023
"Bailey misappropriated nearly $4.1 million for personal expenses and additionally misused over $900,000 for unauthorized purposes, including nearly $670,000 of undisclosed Ponzi-like payments to other investors," the SEC complaint alleges.
By Maria Dinzeo | September 25, 2023
"We're not crazy. We just want to make sure people are being responsible with people's information," Rick Arney, co-author of California's privacy law, said.
By Mason Lawlor | September 22, 2023
This complaint was first surfaced by Law.com Radar.
By Ross Todd | September 22, 2023
Davis Wright Tremaine partners Ambika Kumar, David Gossett and counsel Adam Sieff persuaded a federal judge in San Jose that the California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act—a law passed last year with bipartisan support aimed at protecting children when they're online—likely violates the First Amendment.
By Riley Brennan | September 21, 2023
This complaint was first surfaced by Law.com Radar.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By James Francis | September 21, 2023
These two recent federal appellate FCRA decisions are 2023 must-reads for anyone in the fair credit reporting litigation space, and will likely play out for many years.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Bob Jaworski | September 15, 2023
On Aug. 18, 2023, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy signed into law a bill (A4284) that limits the surcharges merchants may charge their customers who choose to pay for goods or services using a credit card and requires disclosure of the surcharge.
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