0 results for '*'
Federal Judge Sends Infant Death Case to Philadelphia Court
A couple who claim their 1-year-old son died as a result of taking Infants' Tylenol have won the right to pursue their products liability suit in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas now that a federal judge has ruled that the case was improperly removed to U.S. District Court. The judge in the case found that while the drug's manufacturer is incorporated in New Jersey, it must also be considered a citizen of Pennsylvania because that is its principal place of business.Panel Finds Past Abuse Admissible in Rape Case
The Third Department held that a man's abusive behavior toward his wife was relevant to his prosecution for the rape of her 15-year-old niece and provided probative context to the teenager's fear of defendant, that a history of alcohol abuse can be an aggravating factor in increasing a sex offender's risk level, and that a village may lure deer to locations where hunters could kill them, among other decisions.UCLA Launches LL.M. in the Law and Sexuality
The University of California at Los Angeles School of Law has announced plans to offer an LL.M. in Law and Sexuality — the first of its kind at a U.S. law school, according to administrators. The program will focus on gender-identity and sexual-orientation law.View more book results for the query "*"
Did End of Missouri Malpractice Case Feed Dewey's Money Woes?
The answer to that question is hard to come by given that just as the firm dove into what proved to be its death spiral, it settled the $3 billion lawsuit brought by Show Me State regulators for a sum that remains shrouded in secrecy.A Plea for Sanity: How GCs Can Help Stop the Culture of Extreme Work
Employees work too hard, and that's not good for business. Tired accounting staff don't add columns A and B correctly. Exhausted executives make rash decisions. Sleep-deprived employees driving home from a late night at the office run off the road or worse. Simply put, there's no return on investment on exhausted employees.New York City Bar Urges Public Access to Disciplinary Matters
The New York City Bar is calling for increased public access to attorney disciplinary matters and a seven-year limitations period for initiating disciplinary proceedings. These are among the many reforms the bar group is advocating in its legislative agenda for 2011, released last week.Trending Stories
Law Offices of Gary Martin Hays & Associates, P.C.
(470) 294-1674
Law Offices of Mark E. Salomone
(857) 444-6468
Smith & Hassler
(713) 739-1250
Aligning Client Needs with Lawyer Growth and Profitability
Brought to you by BigHand
Download Now
Technology to Make E-Discovery Smarter, Not Harder
Brought to you by Nuix
Download Now
Does Generative AI Have the Power to Transform Legal Services?
Brought to you by HaystackID
Download Now
How This Personal Injury Firm Reduced Client Intake Time by 80%
Brought to you by PracticePanther
Download Now