By Melea VanOstrand | December 27, 2022
"There's a recession, there's higher interest rates, inflation. But on the other side, you have a new source of demand, you have groups coming back, you're able to adjust rates, and you have new supply," said Driftwood Capital CEO Carlos Rodriguez Sr.
By Avalon Zoppo | December 22, 2022
Judge Richard Clifton, of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, said judges on his court have speculated that there are more appeals ahead, though no signs of that trend have emerged yet.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Christine Schiffner | December 21, 2022
Plaintiffs bar leaders are mostly optimistic about business and litigation trends in 2023, but are also seeing some bumps on the road ahead.
By Colleen Murphy | December 20, 2022
The law would increase the minimum number of days of advance notice that a company with more than 100 full-time employees must give to workers, to 90 days from 60 days. And the law requires severance pay of one week for each year of service to the company.
By News Service of Florida | December 20, 2022
Former state Rep. Joe Harding, R-Ocala, faces charges of wire fraud, money laundering and making false statements.
By The Associated Press | December 20, 2022
Robert Wiser Bates, 39, of Ridgeland, threatened to kill Walensky in voicemails left in July 2021 at the CDC headquarters in Atlanta, court records said.
By Mason Lawlor | December 19, 2022
"The district court erred by misconstruing the Students' argument as a right to education generally, despite the record clearly establishing that the Students are alleging a denial of access to in-person education—a specific 'service, program, or activity' that CCSD provides to all students," Circuit Judge Charles R. Wilson wrote. On remand, the district court must analyze under the "correct scope: access to the benefits provided by in-person schooling," the opinion said.
By Avalon Zoppo | December 19, 2022
Judge James Graves Jr. said his colleagues wrongly relied on the "major questions" doctrine in upholding the injunction.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | December 16, 2022
"In addition to a $4.2 million penalty, Dr. Sidana and his clinic's billing will be subject to ongoing oversight and scrutiny to ensure these unacceptable practices never occur again," Attorney General William Tong said.
By Allison Dunn | December 15, 2022
"Ostensibly, the subject of the complaint is disability discrimination. Nonetheless, it says next to nothing about plaintiff's claimed disability. Instead, it consists almost entirely of a rambling and hyperbolic tirade against the state court system generally and the mask requirement specifically," Chief Judge F. Dennis Saylor IV wrote.
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