By Charles Toutant | P.J. D'Annunzio | November 18, 2020
A man who suffered a traumatic brain injury when the bus he was riding in collided with a car was paid a $1.25 million settlement in his Hudson…
By Greg Land | November 17, 2020
A lawyer for the injured man said the settlement was aided by evidence the trucker's employer failed to check into his spotty driving record before hiring him.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | November 16, 2020
The lawsuit against the now-defunct Miracle Meadows in Harrison County, West Virginia, alleged that staff members of the school for at-risk youth abused children for years.
By Raychel Lean | November 13, 2020
"We hope they can overcome the heartbreaking events they endured and find peace and comfort," the school board said.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Timothy R. Capowski, Jonathan P. Shaub, Joseph J. Belgane and Jennifer A. Graw | November 13, 2020
In this article the author's focus on the most insidious and all-too-prevalent improper summation trope: the plaintiff's attack based on the defendant's purported "failure to take responsibility."
Daily Business Review | Analysis
By Dan Roe | November 12, 2020
When the pandemic caused cash-strapped companies to pull TV and radio ads, the personal injury firm swooped in to renegotiate deals, expanding its advertising footprint and bringing in more cases, founder John Morgan said in an interview.
By VerdictSearch | November 12, 2020
On April 28, 2017, plaintiff Keith Zabielski, 51, a laborer, was part of a construction crew that was building a retaining wall at a home in Willow Grove. Zabielski claimed that a backhoe was transporting a 1,000-pound concrete block secured by a single nylon strap, and the block slid out of the strap, causing it to fall and strike Zabielski's right knee. Zabielski claimed psychiatric injuries and injuries to his knee and back.
By Charles "Chuck" Bennett and Jamie Holland | November 12, 2020
In a trial as in life, "you never get a second chance to make a first impression." Opening statement is the jury's first impression of the case,…
By Meredith Hobbs | November 11, 2020
With jury trials and his amateur fights both on hold, Arthur York invokes bad faith claims and other adversarial tactics at his new solo shop to keep cases moving.
By Charles Toutant | November 11, 2020
The claim could be a harbinger of more things to come, with three other corrections officers and three jail staff members dead of COVID-19 in New Jersey since the pandemic began.
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