By Amanda Bronstad | September 24, 2019
In its motion to dismiss, Marriott insisted the breach caused no harm to its guests and attached a declaration by a former government official who wrote: "A U.S. passport is virtually impossible to forge successfully."
By Amanda Bronstad | September 24, 2019
In its motion to dismiss, Marriott insisted the breach caused no harm to its guests and attached a declaration by a former government official who wrote: "A U.S. passport is virtually impossible to forge successfully."
By Amanda Bronstad | September 23, 2019
Corporate defendants facing the first jury trial over the opioid crisis, such as Johnson & Johnson and McKesson, plan to challenge the jury selection process after court officials dismissed 70% of the prospective jurors from service this month.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 23, 2019
Corporate defendants facing the first jury trial over the opioid crisis, such as Johnson & Johnson and McKesson, plan to challenge the jury selection process after court officials dismissed 70% of the prospective jurors from service this month.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | September 20, 2019
Although Risperdal continues to be the largest mass tort by far, two much more recently consolidated mass tort programs have begun to emerge.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 18, 2019
Pharmaceutical firm Purdue filed for bankruptcy after agreeing to a settlement of all opioid lawsuits—well, almost all of them.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 17, 2019
Steven Marks will help lead the plaintiffs executive committee handling nearly 100 cases filed over the Ethiopian Airlines crash that led Boeing to ground its 737 Max 8 jet.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 17, 2019
In a report released Tuesday by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Institute for Legal Reform, California fell from No. 47, its position since 2012. It was the lowest ranking for the Golden State since the Chamber began issuing its report in 2002.
By Angela Morris | September 16, 2019
"Plaintiffs resort to demonstrably false allegations of wrongdoing against the defendants that have little to do with the process that resulted in independent determinations that each of their settlements was fair," said Clark, Love & Hutson's Sept. 13 answer.
By Jenna Greene | September 16, 2019
If defense counsel sincerely felt they couldn't get a fair shake based on remarks Polster made in January of 2018, why didn't they speak up sooner?
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