By Jenna Greene | November 6, 2019
The case was about more than consumer redress. It also established an important precedent at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
By Jenna Greene | October 30, 2019
While I admit no electricity is preferable to catastrophic wildfires that kill dozens of people and destroy billions of dollars in property, surely the choice shouldn't be either/or.
By Jenna Greene | October 26, 2019
They way class actions involving low-cost consumer goods are handled makes no sense for anyone but plaintiffs lawyers. And possibly prison inmates.
By Jenna Greene | October 22, 2019
Pro tip: Don't hire a lawyer based on how many Twitter followers they have. You're welcome.
By C. Ryan Barber | October 4, 2019
Paul Weiss appellate leader Kannon Shanmugam wants the U.S. Supreme Court to take his challenge to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The court received a new and competing petition, from Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, a few days ago.
By Jenna Greene | October 3, 2019
A special master on Tuesday recommended that the government pay LabMD's legal fees—sweet vindication for LabMD's founder after a monster legal battle with the FTC.
By Zach Schlein | October 2, 2019
Litigator Theodore J. Leopold is helping to represent a national class in legal action against the automotive company. An amended complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan on Monday alleges GM was aware several vehicles manufactured between 2015 and 2019 contained defective eight-speed automatic transmissions and did nothing to warn customers.
By Jenna Greene | October 1, 2019
A federal Judge in Chicago tossed a putative class action against a sunscreen maker because the label on its aerosol can said "shake well" before use, as opposed to "shake vigorously for 10 seconds."
By Amanda Bronstad | September 26, 2019
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has ordered lead plaintiffs' attorneys and U.S. District Judge Dan Polster to respond to Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost's petition for writ of mandamus seeking to halt the Oct. 21 trial over the opioid crisis.
By Alaina Lancaster | September 23, 2019
Consumers claim that they would not have paid the artificially inflated travel insurance prices had they known that the airline negotiated a brokerage fee with the sellers.
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