By Allison Dunn | December 1, 2021
Personal injury lawyer Mark Sparks warned of a "coffee goblin" on the loose across Texas. While fictional, it's the only explanation Sparks…
By Jacob Polacheck | November 30, 2021
As the firm rethinks its strategy, the pandemic has led it to abandon hiring younger lawyers for the time being.
By Greg Land | November 19, 2021
A defense lawyer said the 17-year-old, diagnosed with viral syndrome and discharged from the emergency room, actually suffered from a rare and untreatable pulmonary condition.
By Aleeza Furman | November 18, 2021
A man who suffered long-term neurological injuries from a medical mistake in brain surgery has been awarded a $9.7 million verdict in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas.
By Melissa Siegel | November 16, 2021
Although records indicated that the doctor believed the patient's heart was failing, the defense's experts opined that the patient did not exhibit symptoms of congestive heart failure.
By Raychel Lean | Charles Toutant | November 15, 2021
"I don't believe that a case is ever worth pursuing under a theory of, 'You could have just tried something else and chose not to,' " one South Florida attorney said.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By John L.A. Lyddane | November 15, 2021
The single point of agreement seems to be that the policy considerations articulated by the court, before and after codification in CPLR §214-a, have remained the same since the court first spoke to the issue in 1962.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | November 12, 2021
Co-lead counsel Shanin Specter—who tried the case with Kila Baldwin—said that the treatment for their client's condition would typically be a craniotomy, but instead, the surgeon opted to use a new, experimental procedure.
Daily Business Review | Diversity in the Raw|News|Profile
By Jasmine Floyd | November 11, 2021
"I want to see more people thriving. The environment in which I grew up in, there wasn't a lot of self empowerment and there were not a lot of opportunities for people to be empowered. They either didn't have the knowledge or resources to do so. So, when you see people who are in a situation due to lack of knowledge, resources and education and you see that enough, you can't just sit there and let it just lie," president Trelvis Randolph said.
Daily Business Review | Investigation|News
By Jasmine Floyd | November 9, 2021
"One thing we argued at trial was that the defendant should have referred the plaintiff to a specialist when it was clear that she needed a higher level of care. It really just comes down to common sense and doing what is in the best interest of patients," partner Francisco Viñas said.
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