By Amanda Bronstad | July 27, 2021
Attorney Ben Crump teamed up with New York's Napoli Shkolnik to file a lawsuit Tuesday on behalf of the National Council of Negro Women alleging that Johnson & Johnson marketed its baby powder to Black women, many of whom died of ovarian cancer.
By Ryan Tarinelli | July 14, 2021
The state attorney general's office says they negotiated with Greentree Country Club in New Rochelle, New York to get restitution for a total of 76 consumers who paid deposits.
By Tom McParland | July 13, 2021
In the complaint set aside by the court, customers said Peloton had falsely claimed its on-demand offerings were "ever-growing," but that wasn't true as videos were cut because of music licensing issues.
By Jane Wester | July 8, 2021
The agreement also lays out a plan for Purdue to release tens of millions of documents, including 13 categories of attorney-client privileged records, to the public.
By Robert Appleton | June 25, 2021
It remains to be seen whether these schemes are here to stay or will be replaced by even newer methods as the pandemic wanes.
By Amanda Bronstad | June 21, 2021
In a Monday order, U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria significantly scaled back the request, originally estimated to give $800 million to lead counsel in the Roundup multidistrict litigation. He also found the common fund doctrine inapplicable in the cases and called on a federal rules committee to consider new methods to compensate lead counsel in MDLs.
By Tom McParland | June 16, 2021
New court appearances, logged by defense attorneys from Dentons and Thompson Hine, came as New York federal courts have become the main venue for bringing website accessibility claims. Deep disagreement, however, has emerged among appeals courts over what standard to apply to plaintiffs' ADA claims.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Linton Mann III and William T. Russell Jr. | June 15, 2021
In their New York Court of Appeals Roundup, Linton Mann III and William T. Russell Jr. discuss Himmelstein v. Matthew Bender & Co., where the court recently considered the scope of the General Business Law's prohibition of deceptive acts or practices in a case against legal publisher Matthew Bender & Company.
By Tom McParland | June 14, 2021
According to the six-page complaint, Affirm held its loans out as an alternative to paying for products by credit card, without disclosing allegedly "unfavorable" terms.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Shari Claire Lewis | June 14, 2021
A wide range of federal and state authorities are involved in the regulation of emerging technologies in one way or another. As Shari Claire Lewis explores in this edition of her Internet Issues/Social Media column, perhaps no federal or state entity is more focused on the plethora of legal issues raised by new innovations than the Federal Trade Commission.
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