By Phillip Bantz | May 15, 2020
"Lawyers, in my personal view and to over-generalize, can be a little too risk-averse," said Charles Berkman, longtime general counsel Ligand Pharmaceuticals Inc., a San Diego-based firm that licenses and supplies Captisol, a crucial ingredient in experimental COVID-19 treatment drug remdesivir.
By Karen Sorrell | April 27, 2020
To qualify for benefits, California workers must provide a confirmed positive test for COVID-19.
By Christopher Viadro | April 20, 2020
Workers to Face Challenges: The vast majority of California workers will face a higher hurdle to establish workers' compensation claims for workplace exposure to COVID-19.
By Patrick Smith | April 17, 2020
Leaders of Big Law life science practices say they've seen a busy 2020 despite, and in some ways because of, the difficulties created by the presence of COVID-19.
By Ross Todd | April 6, 2020
Yikon Genomics Inc. and Brandon Hensinger, the CEO of the Foster City, California-based company, were alleged to have offered an at-home test for the virus behind the global pandemic even though the FDA has so far not approved any such a test.
By Cheryl Miller | March 23, 2020
Accustomed to working behind the scenes, their efforts are now surfacing publicly in emergency declarations, letters to the president and even leases for hospital space.
By Frances Rogers and Kate S. Im | February 20, 2020
Senate Bill 223, also known as Jojo's Act, permits school districts, county boards of education, and charter schools maintaining kindergarten or any grades 1 to 12, to adopt a policy allowing a parent or guardian to administer medical marijuana to their student who is a "qualified patient" on school grounds.
By Amanda Bronstad | January 14, 2020
U.S. District Judge Richard Seeborg, who contrasted the plaintiffs' experts to those admitted in cases over Roundup, is likely to end the multidistrict litigation over Viagra, which involves more than 1,000 lawsuits alleging the erectile dysfunction medication increased the progression of melanoma.
By Ross Todd | January 14, 2020
Federal prosecutors took aim at defense motions to dismiss the wire fraud case against Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes arguing that they charged the case in a way that doesn't require them to point to specific false statements.
By Jacqueline Thomsen | December 27, 2019
While some of the opinions have been in his favor, like the U.S. Supreme Court allowing his long-promised wall on the southern border to be built, other rulings have ended in key defeats.
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