Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | March 4, 2024
"The families we represent, the thing they want most out of this case is to keep this from happening to anyone else, and this judge's ruling provides just the opposite," Kathryn Barnett of Morgan & Morgan said. "That just can't be the law."
By Alex Anteau | March 4, 2024
Cardea, a wealth management firm valued at $175 million by the SEC last year, argued that the trial court had deprived it of its due process rights when it ruled on the issue before the company responded to the plaintiff's demand.
By Michael A. Mora | March 4, 2024
"Sure, the defendants would have liked the $1.2 million in attorney fees," said Bill Schifino, a shareholder at Gunster. "But the most important thing for the defendant was winning the case and they did so hands down."
By Cedra Mayfield | March 4, 2024
Candidate qualifying runs through March 8 for judicial incumbents and challengers interested in running for election in the May 21, 2024, nonpartisan primary.
By Ross Todd | March 4, 2024
Shuster, who helped found Holwell Shuster & Goldberg in 2012 after heading global commercial litigation at White & Case, says "the challenge there was the same as it is at HSG—build effective teams, make sure younger lawyers are receiving proper mentorship, achieve good results for clients."
By Justin Henry | March 4, 2024
Burford Capital, the world's largest publicly traded litigation funder, is building up its team of lawyers dedicated to enforcing rulings in which foreign assets are at stake.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 1, 2024
"Because it doesn't appear that you are even remotely remorseful for any of the conduct that you have been alleged, or been found, to have been involved in," Miami-Dade Circuit Judge William Thomas said in tense arguments that occurred prior to the closings.
By Colleen Murphy | Charles Toutant | March 1, 2024
Here's where trials will restart in New Jersey, and where judicial vacancies and shutdowns still loom.
By Alex Anteau | March 1, 2024
"If this Court were to reverse the trial court's order and hold that when a medical student is on a clinical rotation with a physician the physician is vicariously liable for that student's conduct, what physician would ever participate in the educational process with the prospect they would be held vicariously liability for a medical student's error?" the appellee brief asked. "The answer is simple—no physician would accept that risk."
By Marianna Wharry | March 1, 2024
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