By Jane Wester | April 25, 2024
U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan rejected Trump's argument that he gave an erroneous jury charge on the burden of proof with respect to punitive damages.
By Brian Lee | April 25, 2024
In 4-3 decision, Court of Appeals says the trial court erroneously admitted testimony of uncharged allegations of prior sex acts.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | April 25, 2024
"We are reviewing the complaint and are confident that we have done absolutely nothing wrong," United Health CEO Brandon Edwards said. "We operate with the highest integrity in all matters."
By Charles Toutant | April 24, 2024
"I'm a defense lawyer primarily, but at the end of the day, noncompete agreements were not meant to be a tool to prevent your midlevel workers from going from Company A to Company B," employment attorney Michael Elkins said.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | April 23, 2024
"Rather than working to lower insulin and other Type 2 diabetes medication prices, major [pharmacy benefit managers] and manufacturers use their dominant market positions to drastically increase the price of these necessary, life-saving medications, generating billions of dollars in illicit profits," co-lead counsel for the plaintiff claimed in a joint statement.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | April 22, 2024
"This is an important decision for all injured workers," Andrew Wallace said. "When a worker is injured, they often need medical treatment and payments for lost wages right away. Most injured workers do not have the luxury of waiting more than the 28-day statutory response period."
By Jane Wester | April 22, 2024
The accord involved five points, including that Donald Trump's collateral would remain in cash in a money market account.
By Emily Saul | April 22, 2024
"This was a planned, coordinated, long-running conspiracy to help Donald Trump get elected through illegal expenditures using doctored corporate records," ADA Matthew Colangelo told the packed courtroom during opening statements. "It was election fraud, pure and simple."
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | April 19, 2024
Gary J. Greene of Greene Law, counsel for the plaintiff, said, "This is a seismic change. … The court has always taken the position that it's the litigant's duty to provide the court with the correct information so they can make a decision. The dissent points that out. Counsel didn't file a motion for articulation, which could have easily been done."
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | April 18, 2024
The statutory prejudgment interest on the allegedly unpaid invoices is around $1.6 million with an interest rate of 12%, leading to a balance of nearly $4.3 million, as of April 15, the complaint said.
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