By ALM Staff | June 3, 2022
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Cedra Mayfield | May 27, 2022
"Between February 2015 and March 2019, [Mark] Scheinberg and Stone Academy mailed 154 small, direct payments to loan servicers on behalf of 102 students in attempts to prevent those students from defaulting on their loans and being counted in Stone Academy's [cohort default rate]," read a statement by the U.S. attorney for the District of Connecticut.
By Mason Lawlor | May 25, 2022
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has reversed and remanded, in part, a Tennessee federal judge's grant of summary judgment to a school district that was sued by two female students after a videotape surfaced of them engaging in sexual activity with other male students.
By Jane Wester | May 19, 2022
In-person teaching was "promised and expected by the parties," said a lawyer for a student seeking a tuition refund.
By Gerard S. Catalanello and Kimberly (Kodis) Schiffman | May 10, 2022
A summary of the factors that courts have considered and will likely continue to consider when addressing dischargeability of private student loans under the Bankruptcy Code, and a cautionary word for practitioners considering whether to put forth an argument to the contrary.
By Marianna Wharry | May 6, 2022
The families of four San Diego Unified School District students filed an amended complaint April 29 in a federal lawsuit against SDUSD and its Board of Education for violation of their rights under the First Amendment by imposing a COVID-19 vaccine mandate.
By Cedra Mayfield | May 3, 2022
"The Supreme Court clarified that a government employee cannot sue for a retaliatory termination under the Georgia Whistleblower Act until an authorized supervisor terminates the employee," said appellant counsel Barton Black of Blue Sky Law in Smyrna.
By Phillip Bantz | May 2, 2022
Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares has appointed Cliff Iler as senior assistant attorney general and UVA university counsel.
By Adolfo Pesquera | April 27, 2022
Amy Senia, an associate of San Francisco-based BraunHagey & Borden, filed a lawsuit Monday against a Texas county for censorship of books in the public library system. Senia said she was shocked to learn that the school district she attended had been caught up in State Rep. Matt Krause's hit list of 850 books, the vast majority of them addressing topics on the LGBTQ+ community, race and people of color, and sex education.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | April 14, 2022
A Lehigh Valley judge found that the incidents of severe bullying of a kindergarten student that gave rise to the plaintiffs' cause of action fell "squarely" under the exception.
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