By Marcia Coyle | April 6, 2022
While Roberts has dissented before, Wednesday's order is the first time he joined an opinion criticizing the majority for its misuse of the shadow docket.
By Amanda Bronstad | February 4, 2022
On Friday, U.S. District Judge Judith Levy granted the fees, which are slightly less than lead counsel's initial request of $202 million.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Michael Marciano | January 19, 2022
Save the Sound and the University of Connecticut Environmental Law Clinic have sued the Town of Ridgefield over its alleged failure to manage pollution from local waterways, which they claim results in harm to Long Island Sound.
By Jason Grant | December 1, 2021
Lawyers argued fiercely about whether there had been sufficient, or any, DOJ oversight of Rita Glavin, the judge-appointed special prosecutor, during the contempt case, and about whether an alleged lack of such supervision had violated the U.S. Constitution or Supreme Court case law.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 3, 2021
Five years after its filing, a lawsuit over GM's diesel vehicles filed in the wake of the Volkswagen emissions scandal could come to a screeching halt. A federal judge Michigan has ordered the plaintiffs firms to show why their lawsuit shouldn't be tossed, noting he had "serious doubt" that he had jurisdiction over the case given there was no evidence of a "defeat device."
By Robert Storace | July 1, 2021
Pullman & Comley's Steven Stafstrom Jr. talked with the Connecticut Law Tribune to discuss topics ranging from commercial evictions and foreclosures, the environment and what makes his firm unique.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Robert Storace | March 29, 2021
The ruling means anyone not directly hired by the homeowner for work can still be liable for damages.
By Jason Grant | March 8, 2021
While ruling in lawyer Steven Donziger's favor on one civil contempt-of-court count, and reversing a sanctions award tied to it, the majority panel also took pains to make clear to Donziger that his past litigation fundraising actions that led to that contempt finding will not be tolerated again.
By Marcia Coyle | March 4, 2021
The "customary criteria" for a debut majority decision at the U.S. Supreme Court, one court scholar writes, is a "unanimous decision in a case lacking great controversy."
By Jason Grant | February 26, 2021
"We, the undersigned law students, refuse to consider employment with the firm until it withdraws from its conflicted position as Chevron's private prosecutor," the student letter issued to Seward & Kissel's partnership says. Donziger, facing federal criminal contempt-of-court charges, helped win an $8.6 billion judgment against Chevron in Ecuador. He claims Chevron has been trying to "ruin" him since.
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