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Legal ethics issues affecting funding of class actions, how funding affects ability to bring class actions and implications for settlement values
By Ross Todd | January 31, 2024
Quick hint: Look back at the financial headlines from early in the year.
4 minute read
By ALM Staff | January 30, 2024
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.
1 minute read
By Marianna Wharry | January 29, 2024
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar.
3 minute read
By Michael A. Mora | January 29, 2024
In the final panel, those in attendance learned a new MDL is coming to South Florida.
3 minute read
By Hugo Guzman | January 29, 2024
Mega-settlements and high class-certification rates likely will "incentivize the plaintiffs' class action bar to be equally if not more aggressive with their case filings and settlement positions in 2024," according to a report by the law firm Duane Morris.
4 minute read
By Riley Brennan | January 26, 2024
According to the class action suit, more than 400 items were mispriced throughout store locations in D.C., many of which are alleged to have been mispriced and left uncorrected for months.
3 minute read
By Michael A. Mora | January 26, 2024
"Unless you fall within narrow circumstances, you are better off limiting these cases to defendants whom you have some type of relationship with," said Michael Hanzman, senior counsel at Bilzin Sumberg.
3 minute read
By Avalon Zoppo | January 24, 2024
Electronics giant Samsung is challenging a lower court order that it pay more than $4 million in arbitration initiation fees.
7 minute read
By Colleen Murphy | January 24, 2024
"Defendants agreed with OPEC to constrain production of crude oil worldwide, with the purpose and effect of fixing, raising, and maintaining the price of crude oil in and throughout the United States of America and worldwide," the complaint said. "Defendants are not sovereign nations, and they are not immune to U.S. antitrust law."
4 minute read
By Ross Todd | January 23, 2024
According to court papers, Yale University and Emory University have agreed to pay $18.5 million apiece, Brown University has agreed to pay $19.5 million, and Columbia University and Duke University both agreed to pay $24 million to settle claims they colluded to limit the amount of need-based financial aid provided to undergraduates.
2 minute read
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