0 results for 'Dickie, McCamey & Chilcote'
Chief Judge Stengel of Eastern District to Retire in August
In a statement released Monday, the court announced Stengel, 66, will return to his native Lancaster County to work in private practice after 14 years on the federal bench.Subcontractor Sued for Faulty Workmanship Loses Bid for Insurance Coverage
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, affirming a district court's decision, has ruled that a subcontractor sued for faulty workmanship was not entitled to a defense from its insurance company.Justices: UPMC Had Duty to Report Employee Misconduct That Led to Hep C Outbreak
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has ruled that UPMC Presbyterian Shadyside Hospital had a duty to report to authorities the activities of a lab technician whose conduct sparked a multistate hepatitis C outbreak.Subcontractor Sued for Faulty Workmanship Loses Bid for Insurance Coverage
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, affirming a district court’s decision, has ruled that a subcontractor sued for faulty workmanship…People in the News—April 26, 2018—Dickie, McCamey & Chilcote
Dickie, McCamey & Chilcote attorney Charles E. Haddick Jr. is a speaker on episode 137 of “Updates in Insurance Coverage and Bad Faith,” A.M. Best's insurance law podcast.Who Got the Work April 23, 2018
Midsize firms are getting hired for big cases and deals.PLW People in the News—April 17, 2018—Lamb McErlane
Lamb McErlane attorney Kevin J. Conrad was selected to serve on the Lower Merion School District's school safety task force.People in the News—April 16, 2018—Dickie, McCamey & Chilcote
Dickie, McCamey & Chilcote added Jessica L. Altobelli as an associate to its Pittsburgh office. She joins the Medicare compliance practice group.Narrowing the Scope of Medical Malpractice E-Discovery Requests
I remember it like it was yesterday. I was at trial, sitting at the defense table and the plaintiff's electronic medical records (EMR) expert was testifying before the juryJustices to Mull Whether MCARE Repose Statute Allows Claims Over Failing Organs
If patients with sponges and scissors left in their bodies can sue more than seven years after their surgeries, why can't organ recipients who received problematic organs do the same?Trending Stories
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