By Jenna Greene | October 26, 2018
Esserman led a coalition that included PepsiCo and Reynolds Consumer Products to victory in a high-stakes trade fight at the International Trade Commission.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | October 25, 2018
A Lackawanna County judge has opened court records in a case involving a $19.5 million settlement between a mother whose child was born with brain damage and a hospital.
By Dan M. Clark | October 25, 2018
Uber has agreed to pay a record $148 million in state and local penalties to settle allegations that the company intentionally concealed a major data breach in 2016 that exposed the personal information of 57 million people, with $5.7 million going to Pennsylvania, state Attorney General Josh Shapiro's office said.
By Lizzy McLellan | October 25, 2018
"Our clients are national and international, so the group covers the whole country, and that's part of why I'm heading it," Patrick Gallagher said.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Sharon M. Porcellio | October 25, 2018
In her Western District Roundup, Sharon M. Porcellio writes: Throughout these opinions, practitioners can glean several “takeaways” for guidance in the discovery process in general and before filing motions concerning allegedly deficient responses. While recognizing every case is fact specific, the facts in these cases illustrate some takeaways that are helpful to both well-seasoned and newly-minted attorneys alike.
By Ellis Kim | October 25, 2018
Matthew Collette, who currently serves as the deputy director of the Civil Division appellate staff, will leave the Justice Department this month.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Jeff Sassinsky | October 25, 2018
The buzz around drones has swept the World. Their use in infrastructure inspection, cinematography and search and rescue are obvious, but can this technology be used in litigation to save money and ultimately win more cases?
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Leonard Deutchman | October 25, 2018
The court is to be lauded both in its criticism of existing precedent and in its recognition of its role in inviting the appellate courts to rewrite that precedent rather than doing so itself. In the first part of this column, I shall discuss why the court is right on both counts.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Danielle N. Garno and Elisa M. Hevia | October 25, 2018
In the wake of several lawsuits filed by interns for unpaid wages against fashion powerhouses like Donna Karan, Marc Jacobs, Gucci, The Row, and Hearst Communications (Elle, Marie Claire, Cosmo, Seventeen), the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) announced that it will use a new test.
By Zach Schlein | October 25, 2018
The charge to open the room — which will be made public on Monday — was led by Broward Circuit Judge Stacy Ross and Hinshaw & Culbertson attorney Madeleine Mannello.
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