By Amanda O'Brien | April 11, 2024
In the last week, attorneys left Fox Rothschild and Swartz Campbell for plaintiffs firms, and at least two others have made similar moves since the start of 2024.
By Avalon Zoppo | April 10, 2024
It's not like it's a Disney one-pass ticket [where] you get on any ride you want," said U.S. District Judge R. David Proctor. "There are unique things about practicing in our court."
By Avalon Zoppo | April 5, 2024
"[S]houldn't the output stand on its own—whether it was drafted by a robot, a first year associate, or an experienced partner?" said John Nalbandian.
By Amanda Bronstad | April 3, 2024
Plaintiffs lawyers in the Ozempic multidistrict litigation organized a leadership team of 30 attorneys, but one Florida attorney objected to the proposed slate, which she says appears to be composed of 'repeat players.'
By Charles Toutant | March 29, 2024
A 2020 verdict allowed Teva and other companies to produce generic versions of Vascepa. But Teva allegedly had to scale back its launch because of an inability to obtain the key ingredient, the suit said.
By Emily Cousins | March 26, 2024
"The sooner you bring a piece of litigation, the sooner you find out what the facts are," attorney Richard Silver said about the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore.
By Lisa Willis | March 26, 2024
"I'm a huge proponent of AI, but it must be used with guardrails, and too many are rushing to use it," said attorney Francisco Ramos Jr. of Clarke Silverglate.
By Charles Toutant | March 22, 2024
A legal dispute over accommodation of Tourette syndrome in a job involving interaction with the public is a particularly "tricky" type of disability dispute, said plaintiff-side employment lawyer Andrew Moskowitz.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 21, 2024
Jeff Kray, of Marten Law in Seattle, accused of holding up DuPont's $1.19 billion water contamination settlement, called class counsel's sanctions motion an "intimidation tactic" based on a "fantastical conspiracy theory."
By Charles Toutant | March 19, 2024
"The reason the attorneys don't like it is because attorneys don't want to be put into a situation where they stand up in front of a judge and they don't know what they're doing," said Edward Zohn, the attorney for the plaintiffs.
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