By Tom McParland | February 16, 2022
In her annual address, DiFiore stressed the disparate impact of the court system's "rigid and fragmented" structure on vulnerable families, and called for legislative action on a proposal to its streamline operations.
Daily Report Online | Commentary
By Timothy D. Lytton | February 16, 2022
Using civil litigation to regulate the gun industry will require either a repeal of a broad law passed by Congress in 2005 giving gun-makers broad immunity or finding a way around it, a Georgia State University law professor writes.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | February 16, 2022
U.S. District Judge Gene Pratter of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania agreed with the plaintiff on the standard. But the defense prevailed before the jury.
By Allison Dunn | February 16, 2022
"Most people look at this and they say, 'Look at this crazy attorney, [he] filed a frivolous lawsuit in federal court after he lost in state court.' So, I look like a nut, but nobody knows the backstory, nobody knows what happened to get to this point," attorney Gary Dolan told Law.com.
By Michael A. Mora | February 16, 2022
Jurors returned the eight-figure verdict after deliberating for less than an hour.
By ALM Staff | February 16, 2022
This lawsuit was surfaced on Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By Ross Todd | February 16, 2022
"I think if you had more lawyers who understood the trial dynamic and could really meaningfully assess risk at trial and were willing to do that, you'd have more clients willing to go to trial," says Attanasio, the chair of the firm's global litigation department.
By Ross Todd | February 16, 2022
"I think if you had more lawyers who understood the trial dynamic and could really meaningfully assess risk at trial and were willing to do that, you'd have more clients willing to go to trial," says Attanasio, the chair of the firm's global litigation department.
By ALM Staff | February 16, 2022
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By Alaina Lancaster | February 15, 2022
A State Bar Court judge found that a San Diego attorney's use of the term "succubustic," to refer to an attorney fees ruling was covered under the First Amendment. However, the court recommended disciplinary action for accusing a superior court judge of intentionally refusing to follow the law and exhibiting bias.
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McDermott Law, LLC, a boutique Plaintiffs-focused firm located in the Denver Tech Center, has an opening for a full-time associate attorney....
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