Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | April 11, 2019
Meghan Woods, the Middletown-based attorney representing truck driver Jairo Solis, argued that her client qualified for coverage under an exception that covers workers responding to emergency requests from their employers.
By Sue Reisinger | April 11, 2019
Hertz has sued its former general counsel and two other top executives to recover over $70 million the company says it paid them in incentive pay and a “golden parachute” severance package, plus over $200 million in legal fees and other costs related to misstating company income.
By Sue Reisinger | April 11, 2019
Hertz has sued its former general counsel and two other top executives to recover over $70 million the company says it paid them in incentive pay and a “golden parachute” severance package, plus over $200 million in legal fees and other costs related to misstating company income.
By Richard Binder | April 11, 2019
Carnival has been on probation since 2017 as part of a $40 million settlement stemming from a years-long investigation that revealed ships were illegally dumping oil into the ocean and falsifying their logs to hide it from authorities. Federal prosecutors say Carnival has since violated that probation.
By Jonathan Ringel | April 11, 2019
As Krystal's top lawyer, Perras told the Daily Report in 2014, "Law firms can be expensive for day-to-day work."
By Brendan Farrington | April 5, 2019
Self-driving cars have come under more scrutiny after a vehicle Uber was testing fatally struck a pedestrian in Arizona last year.
By Suzette Parmley | April 4, 2019
In essence, the ruling affirms that, under the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination, "obesity alone is not protected ... as a disability unless it has an underlying medical cause, a condition that plaintiff failed to meet in the present case."
By Jim Turner | April 2, 2019
The Senate Banking and Insurance Committee voted 5-3 to approve the Senate bill, which sponsor Tom Lee expects to be worked into any broader insurance package that emerges in the second half of the session.
By Kristen Rasmussen | April 2, 2019
Federal Aviation Administration regulations allow for the commercial use of drone technology at a minimum-risk threshold, making meaningful transport of blood and other medical materials via the unmanned aircraft unlikely in the near future, legal experts told Corporate Counsel.
By Kristen Rasmussen | April 2, 2019
One North Carolina program is set to begin blood delivery via drone, but legal experts told Corporate Counsel that FAA regulations make longer transport of medical materials via unmanned aircraft unlikely in the near future.
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