By Colleen Murphy | April 18, 2024
"There were pay equity statutes before there were pay transparency requirements which I think are sleeping giants," Christopher T. Wall of Stoel Rives, said. "There is a ton of exposure that, I think, people both on the plaintiff side and on the employer side, are not totally tuned in to. It is good to take stock of pay discrepancies that may exist and to fix those issues. That also helps protect your business from catastrophic liability."
By Cedra Mayfield | Patrick Smith | Elana Ashanti Jefferson | April 5, 2024
In this week's Legal Speak episode, James Whittle with the American Property Casualty Insurance Association dives into the impact of what the organization has dubbed "legal system abuse" as social inflation—the belief that large corporations are "bad actors with deep pockets"—helps fuel "nuclear" verdicts.
By Ellen Bardash | March 29, 2024
Margolis Edelstein and Rigrodsky Law represented Data Logger Solutions, a Florida LLC, at trial before Judge Eric M. Davis.
By Riley Brennan | March 26, 2024
"It's a signal to judges, and it's a signal therefore to litigants as well, that you might as well just start bringing these cases," Alan Rozenshtein, an associate law professor at the University of Minnesota. "You might win."
By Charles Toutant | March 20, 2024
The flap over Mangi's links to the Alliance of Families for Justice bears similarities to the heavy criticism he received for his connection to Rutgers University's Center for Security, Race and Rights. In the case of the Rutgers group, as with the AFJ, Mangi was one of many individuals on the advisory board.
By Ellen Bardash | March 11, 2024
Kirkland & Ellis and Mintz & Gold are representing Fox News.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 1, 2024
Jurors in Conway County Circuit Court, in Arkansas, gave Monsanto its 11th win on Friday in Roundup trials, and New Castle County Superior Court Judge Vivian Medinilla declared a mistrial after jurors in Delaware were deadlocked.
By Ellen Bardash | February 13, 2024
The class seeks to represent Whirlpool customers who, plaintiffs say, have seen ice makers, water dispensers and other features stop working because of the quality of wiring that runs through their freezer doors.
By Riley Brennan | February 7, 2024
"Unlike burning a flag, wearing a medical mask—or refusing to do so—is not the type of thing someone typically does as 'a form of symbolism,'" Third Circuit Judge Thomas L. Ambro said.
By Ellen Bardash | February 5, 2024
Plaintiff's counsel was was part of the team that persuaded a Missouri jury to award three plaintiffs who had non-Hodgkin lymphoma a total of $1.56 billion in November.
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