By Robert Storace | December 4, 2018
A federal judge has ruled Stamford police didn't use excessive force in killing a man who had a weapon that turned out to be a BB gun.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | December 3, 2018
Tiffany Fitzgerald was killed in a wreck as an off-duty police officer pursued the stolen vehicle she was a passenger in.
By R. Robin McDonald | November 30, 2018
A Gwinnett County jury issued the verdict against Lawrenceville business Classic Millwork Designs after workers improperly installed a third-floor dormer window that fell from its frame when a local homebuilder was trying to close it—and caused him to plummet to his death.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | November 28, 2018
Attorneys for the estate of Ashley Ferguson Jones say the death of the mother of two could have been avoided had Nicolae Marcu been attentive when driving his tractor trailer on I-95 two years ago. Marcu's vehicle slammed into Jones as she got out of her car on the side of the road to attend to her ill daughter.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. D'Annunzio | November 21, 2018
An appellant's reliance on a Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision clarifying the scope of the Workers' Compensation Act was misplaced in the wrongful death context, the state Superior Court has ruled.
By Greg Land | November 19, 2018
The suit was filed by the parents of a young man killed when his wife—who had been treated earlier at a substance abuse clinic and who tested positive for methadone and fentanyl—turned in front of an oncoming car.
By Amanda Bronstad | November 16, 2018
A defense verdict in California gives Johnson & Johnson the upper hand in the litigation alleging its asbestos-containing talcum powder products caused mesothelioma.
By Greg Land | November 15, 2018
The jury said the Extended Stay America Hotel in Norcross bore 30 percent of the blame—worth $13.8 million of the total—for the abuse and starvation that led to the death of 15-month-old Alcenti McIntosh in 2014.
By Greg Land | November 15, 2018
The jury said the Extended Stay America Hotel in Norcross bore 30 percent of the blame—worth $18.3 million of the total—for the abuse and starvation that led to the death of 15-month-old Alcenti McIntosh in 2014.
By Tom McParland | November 12, 2018
Attorneys for the shooting victim's family argued that the statute extended protections only to private, unlicensed gun sellers, to whom the 2013 rule change specifically applied. Those protections would not apply to a major retailer like Cabela's.
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