By Kristen Rasmussen | September 12, 2018
Lori Braender, formerly of Day Pitney, will lead the legal functions for the Warren-based company, which is advancing a pipeline of treatment for central nervous system diseases.
By Charles Toutant | September 12, 2018
Emil Jutrowski maintained that, as long as he can show that some officer in the group used excessive force, he can bring before a jury all the officers who were present during his arrest. But that is "simply not the law," the Third Circuit said.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | September 12, 2018
A federal appeals court has upheld the denial of a $1 million fee request by a Scranton attorney in an auto insurance case that produced a verdict almost a tenth of the requested legal compensation. In its denial, the Third Circuit, joining other circuit courts, also held that it is within a judge's discretion to award no attorney fees at all, especially if the fee request is deemed "outrageously excessive."
By Michael Booth | September 12, 2018
A federal judge in New Jersey has dismissed a lawsuit filed by two former FedEx drivers who claimed they were unlawfully fired because of an argument with another employee and because of social media posts that followed the incident.
By Charles Toutant | September 11, 2018
In at least seven suits filed as of early September, the plaintiffs, current and former students at Stockton, describe attending fraternity parties where they were drugged and given alcohol before losing consciousness, then waking up with the realization that they had been sexually assaulted.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Lizzy McLellan | September 10, 2018
A dispute over Williams Cuker Berezofsky is set to go before a panel of arbitrators in November.
By Michael Booth | September 10, 2018
In a release Monday, Grewal said Deputy U.S. Attorney General Thomas Eicher has been named as the director of the Office of Public Integrity and Accountability.
By Charles Toutant | September 10, 2018
The Appellate Division, citing a standard federal courts have applied to acts of omission, has ruled that the common knowledge exception to the affidavit of merit statute applies in a case where nurses allegedly failed to reinsert a nasogastric tube after the patient pulled it out.
By Michael Booth | September 10, 2018
A New Jersey appeals court has reinstated a suit against the state Department of Corrections claiming failure to accommodate the religious practices of a trainee who declined to follow DOC rules requiring the shaving of facial hair.
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