A judge who was seeking $67 million from a dry cleaners that lost his pants has loosened the belt on his lawsuit.
Now, he’s asking for only $54 million, according to a May 30 court filing in D.C. Superior Court.
A judge who was seeking $67 million from a dry cleaners that lost his pants has loosened the belt on his lawsuit. Now, he's asking for only $54 million, according to a filing in D.C. Superior Court. Roy L. Pearson, a District of Columbia administrative law judge, first sued Custom Cleaners over a pair of pants that went missing two years ago. Pearson, who is representing himself, said in an e-mail that the focus of the case was based on the dry cleaners' "false, misleading and fraudulent advertisements."
June 07, 2007 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
A judge who was seeking $67 million from a dry cleaners that lost his pants has loosened the belt on his lawsuit.
Now, he’s asking for only $54 million, according to a May 30 court filing in D.C. Superior Court.
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