The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | October 18, 2019
The defense team said the judge's greeting showed bias, but plaintiffs counsel said the recusal allegation was a 'vituperative' allegation against a sitting judge.
By Phillip Bantz | October 18, 2019
The bank's new top lawyer, Lisa Washington, previously served as CLO and VP of Atlas Energy Group, an energy management company that acquires and develops oil and gas assets.
By P.J. D'Annunzio | October 17, 2019
A Pennsylvania appeals court has rejected Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner's bid to have a Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas judge removed from criminal cases because the judge's girlfriend, a former prosecutor, has accused the district attorney's office of discrimination.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Zack Needles | October 14, 2019
In what appears to be the largest medical malpractice verdict in Montgomery County in three years, a jury has awarded $4.7 million to the wife of a 58-year-old man who died after developing a bacterial infection that his primary care doctor failed to diagnose.
The Legal Intelligencer | Analysis
By Max Mitchell | October 9, 2019
Attorneys who focus on products liability in Pennsylvania said Tuesday's verdict is "impressive" and "staggering," but added that 25-year-old U.S. Supreme Court case law all but ensures the award will be reduced on appeal.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | October 8, 2019
The Philadelphia jury deliberating in the first punitive damages trial over Johnson & Johnson's conduct in marketing the antispychotic drug Risperdal has slammed the company with an $8 billion verdict.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | October 8, 2019
"You 12 individuals, as a jury speaking as one, have that power," Kline & Specter attorney Thomas R. Kline told jurors.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | October 3, 2019
Allegations were first brought in under the qui tam, or whistleblower, provisions of the False Claims Act.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | October 3, 2019
Deborah Dailey formerly served as the First Judicial District's chief deputy prothonotary until her firing and guilty plea on a third-degree felony theft charge in 2014 for using a court credit card to pay bills for her son.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | October 3, 2019
The litigation focuses on allegations that the defendants failed to properly warn about the dangers of the filter devices, which were designed to prevent blood clots, but can allegedly migrate or fracture in patients' bodies, causing perforations.
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