Amanda Bronstad obsesses over class actions and mass torts, keeping you in-the-loop on the news that matters—big wins, novel legal strategies, appellate battles and who’s getting the work.
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By Amanda Bronstad | April 3, 2019
With Avenatti stepping away from $454 million case on appeal, as he begins to fight criminal charges, court has an array of choices to lead the litigation
By Amanda Bronstad | March 27, 2019
Plaintiffs lawyers say the settlement reflects the 'extraordinary importance and strength' of claims against the manufacturer of OxyContin
By Amanda Bronstad | March 20, 2019
Two Stanford students have filed a cause of action saying their degrees have been devalued because the university was targeted the in the admissions fraud scheme. And a rejected student is seeking $5 billion in a suit against the alleged scammers.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 13, 2019
Johnson & Johnson executives did not appear before the subcommittee looking into the alleged link between talc products and cancer, but the company was an obvious focus of the hearing
By Amanda Bronstad | March 6, 2019
Members of Congress reintroduced a measure to curb arbitration clauses, claiming they shut the courthouse door on employees, consumers and survivors of sexual abuse among others
By Amanda Bronstad | February 27, 2019
Sparks flew as the first bellwether trial in the multidistrict litigation over Monsanto's Roundup herbicide opened in San Francisco
By Amanda Bronstad | February 20, 2019
Lawyers say GOP senators' efforts to reboot the measure will likely get a cold shoulder from the Democratic-controlled House
By Amanda Bronstad | February 13, 2019
A law professor said that, if adopted, mandatory arbitration would be 'the death knell of securities fraud class actions'
By Amanda Bronstad | February 6, 2019
The U.S. Justice Department has raised its voice in several cases in which employees challenged "no-poach" employment agreements, and lawyers are weighing the impact of the feds' intervention
By Amanda Bronstad | January 30, 2019
U.S. District Court Judge Lucy Koh rejected an $85 million proposed settlement in the Yahoo data breach case, enumerating a series of points about its lack of adequacy.
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