By Colleen Murphy | October 26, 2022
"The complaint lacks any factual assertion regarding who among defendants acted incompetently or recklessly, or who was unfit and inexperienced in handling Elias's situation, to enable us to glean a cause of action for negligent entrustment or negligent supervision," stated the opinion.
By Cheryl Miller | October 26, 2022
Riverside District Attorney Michael Hestrin said the dismissals are unwarranted and that the court's backlog of cases was created by the COVID-19 pandemic, not a lack of judges.
By ALM Staff | October 26, 2022
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By Amanda Bronstad | October 25, 2022
U.S. District Judge William Orrick delayed the first bellwether trial over Juul's electronic cigarettes to Nov. 15 after finding a "mess of issues" with motions, depositions, exhibits and jury instructions.
By Jason Grant | October 24, 2022
A federal judge in Connecticut allowed a group of medical providers to avoid ERISA preemption and move forward with certain previously dismissed claims based on a state unfair insurance practices act, even though the providers failed in their complaint and briefing to distinguish the act as not being subject to ERISA law.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Courtney C. Brennan | October 24, 2022
This article explores legal issues that are worth revisiting as employers navigate the shift toward hybrid or fully-remote work and the hot-button issues for employers to keep in mind to avoid unnecessary exposure.
By Colleen Murphy | October 24, 2022
"The CDC should not be treating kids in low-income households as lab experiments," Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry said. "Nor should pharmaceutical companies be allowed to use low-income families as cash cows."
By Colleen Murphy | October 24, 2022
"The CDC should not be treating kids in low-income households as lab experiments," Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry said. "Nor should pharmaceutical companies be allowed to use low-income families as cash cows."
New York Law Journal | Letter to the Editor
By Alicea Elloras-Ally and Lillian M. Moy | October 24, 2022
With the end of World War II in sight, Winston Churchill famously quipped, "Never let a good crisis go to waste"—his enticing way of reminding…
By Allison Dunn | October 21, 2022
"The fact that Brandeis offered both in-person and online graduate programs, but only in-person undergraduate programs, could allow a jury to infer that Brandeis reasonably expected plaintiffs (both undergraduates) had paid tuition in exchange for in-person instruction," the judge wrote. "Finally, although classes might be moved with some frequency from one meeting place to another, a jury could find that this did not disturb a reasonable expectation that plaintiffs paid tuition in anticipation of classes meeting in-person somewhere on campus."
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