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Decision of the Day: Compelled Arbitration of Coaches' Claims Against NFL Is Denied Reconsideration
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decision editors.Case Alleging Systemic Race Discrimination Against NFL Allowed to Proceed in Federal Court
The Flores complaint, as well as detailed reporting over the past few years, has shined an unflattering light on the less than stellar hiring and promotion of Black coaches by NFL teams.NFL Fails to Push Brian Flores' Racial Discrimination Claims Into Arbitration
Flores' descriptions of racial discrimination—and those of co-plaintiffs Steve Wilks and Ray Horton, who coached for the Arizona Cardinals and the Tennessee Titans, respectively—are recent examples of the NFL's "systematic discrimination" of Black players and coaches and are "incredibly troubling," U.S. District Judge Valerie Caproni of the Southern District of New York ruled.2 Coaches Join Brian Flores' Suit Alleging Racial Bias by NFL
Flores said Thursday that he had faced retaliation from other NFL teams since he filed the lawsuit.View more book results for the query "Arizona Cardinals"
Georgia Will Help Decide Who Gets the $2.3B in Legal Fees in the Global Opioid Deal
The fees and costs outlined in the $26 billion opioid deal with Johnson & Johnson's Janssen Pharmaceuticals and three distributors are a mix of common benefit fees, contingency fees and payments to the states for outside counsel. One law professor said, "it's not like the lawyers are going to be impoverished."Who Gets the $2.3 Billion in Legal Fees in the Global Opioid Deal?
The fees and costs outlined in the $26 billion opioid deal with Johnson & Johnson's Janssen Pharmaceuticals and three distributors are a mix of common benefit fees, contingency fees and payments to the states for outside counsel. One law professor said, "it's not like the lawyers are going to be impoverished."Dividing $2.3 Billion in Legal Fees: Who Gets What in the Global Opioid Deal?
The fees and costs outlined in the $26 billion opioid deal with Johnson & Johnson's Janssen Pharmaceuticals and three distributors are a mix of common benefit fees, contingency fees and payments to the states for outside counsel. One law professor said, "it's not like the lawyers are going to be impoverished."Del. Among States Vying for Slice of $2.3B in Legal Fees From the Global Opioid Deal
The fees and costs outlined in the $26 billion opioid deal with Johnson & Johnson's Janssen Pharmaceuticals and three distributors are a mix of common benefit fees, contingency fees and payments to the states for outside counsel. One law professor said, "it's not like the lawyers are going to be impoverished."New Fast-Track Docket for Migrants Faces Familiar Challenges
Ecuadorian Neptali Chiluisa crossed the border in June in Arizona and was detained for a week. He found work at New York construction sites. He acknowledges coming for economic reasons and wonders if he has any options for temporary legal status.Trending Stories
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