The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | May 16, 2023
The VisionQuest actions are part of a new wave in Pennsylvania's mass litigation landscape, where several unrelated but similar actions are moving ahead against the same types of facilities over their alleged physical and sexual abuses.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | May 15, 2023
The plaintiff is seeking $3.7 million in delay damages, but Temple University Health System contends that the verdict is part of trend of excessive jury awards against hospitals and doctors.
By Riley Brennan | May 15, 2023
"This decision restores the longstanding right of injured North Dakota workers to seek accountability from negligent general contractors and other workplace entities," counsel for the plaintiffs said.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | May 15, 2023
"I love digging into the evidence and trying to find the key pieces—the needle in the haystack, so to speak," plaintiffs lawyer Mike Snellings said.
By ALM Staff | May 15, 2023
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
By Jason Grant | May 12, 2023
"Workers who observe a coworker in peril may feel a heightened obligation to assist that coworker, with whom the rescuer may have a bond of shared experience and endeavor," said the Appellate Division, First Department court in a detailed, signed opinion.
By Mason Lawlor | May 12, 2023
"It's one thing to make an error when you're handling a case; we all make errors," Spivey's counsel, Jackie "The Fly Lawyer" Patterson, told the Daily Report. "It's another thing when you lie to your client, deceive your client, and misrepresent yourself to that client."
By Lisa Willis | May 12, 2023
The defense lawyer denies any wrongdoing, and suggests the deposition would be a routine part of the litigation.
By Allison Dunn | May 11, 2023
"Given Philip Morris's research regarding compensation and mutagenicity, the jury could find that these representations were knowingly false. Greene testified that she received these false messages, that she believed them, and that she switched to Marlboro Lights because of this belief. Particularly against the backdrop of her exposure to the conspiracy's broader disinformation campaign, a reasonable jury could conclude that Greene was exposed to the fraud and deception in the particular marketing and messaging regarding filtered cigarettes and that she relied on it to justify her continuing to smoke Marlboro Lights," Justice Scott L. Kafker wrote.
By Colleen Murphy | May 11, 2023
A Passaic County medical malpractice suit filed by a 54-year-old Totowa man and his wife, Dominianni v. Warta, M.D., after an elective hernia repair,…
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