By Amanda Bronstad | October 24, 2022
Attorney Danielle Mason said she planned to file two more lawsuits this week.
By Jane Wester | October 17, 2022
Circuit Judge Michael Park said that the phrase "100% pure, therapeutic-grade," which appeared on all Young Living bottles during the time period relevant to the suit, "sounds like it's provable."
By Amanda Bronstad | September 21, 2022
Many law firms are running their Puerto Rico offices on generators as Hurricane Fiona pelted the island this week with high winds and torrential rains. "The amount of water it dumped in a short amount of time was pretty impressive," said John Driscoll, who, like many plaintiffs lawyers, moved to Puerto Rico a few years ago.
National Law Journal | Analysis
By Christine Schiffner | September 13, 2022
As plaintiffs firms are looking for cost savings on back-office work, more and more find Puerto Rico's tax incentives and talent pool an attractive draw.
By Hugo Guzman | August 17, 2022
"The only certainty of this litigation is it's going to be a big fight, and a long fight," said Matthew Bergman, founding attorney of the Social Media Victims Law Center.
By Allison Dunn | August 8, 2022
"In the course of its analysis, the Supreme Court of Connecticut stated that while there would be no duty for a manufacturer 'to report adverse events associated with the device to the FDA in the absence of federal law requiring such reports,' it does not follow that 'no state law duty to report adverse events to the FDA exists,'" Judge Gerard E. Lynch wrote on behalf of the Second Circuit.
By Amanda Bronstad | August 3, 2022
The trial, in Missouri, is the first since Bayer, which owns Monsanto, lost three potential appeals about Roundup, including two before the U.S. Supreme Court.
By Jane Wester | July 20, 2022
A First Department panel found insufficient evidence to establish that plaintiff's use of talc products resulted in enough exposure to cause mesothelioma.
By Allison Dunn | July 14, 2022
"[T]he CT highway defect statute is really burdensome—like contributory negligence on steroids," said the plaintiff's lead attorney, Stewart M. Casper of Casper & de Toledo. "So it was necessary to plan the case with that in mind. Ultimately, we were able to meet the sole proximate cause burden largely by using the testimony of DOT employees and without experts. If the DOT's No. 1 priority is safety, it was exposed for proceeding with its crosswalk eradication plan without a safety plan for pedestrians. It's unfortunate Kaeleigh was the victim."
By Aleeza Furman | July 14, 2022
A trending approach is gaining momentum as more and more plaintiffs allege that social media companies seek to addict their users.
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