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People in the News—March 4, 2024—Flaster Greenberg, Duane Morris
Meghan K. Finnerty has joined Flaster Greenberg as a shareholder in its litigation and insurance counseling and recovery departments.Products Liability: Responsibility for Harm to Bystanders and Nonusers
Every day people are injured by defectively designed products. Many times, the person injured was not actually "using" the product.Federal Judge Enters Default Judgment in Favor of Law Firm, Hospital Scammed Out of $100K
Grady and Kaplan filed a complaint on Dec. 11 in the district court, claiming Smith Design Studios and its co-conspirators used spoofed emails to execute their scheme to divert Grady Memorial Hospital Corp.'s funds intended for the Kaplan firm, all while avoiding detection.Supreme Court Rejects Challenge to Trump's Eligibility for Office
"[T]he Constitution makes Congress, rather than the States, responsible for enforcing Section 3 [of the Fourteenth Amendment] against federal officeholders and candidates," the high court stated in its unsigned "per curiam" opinion.View more book results for the query "*"
Gen AI Ignorance Holding Back In-House Adoption
"It's clear from our survey that legal departments and law firms are looking for ways to utilize gen AI safely," Consilio CEO Andy Macdonald said. "However, without the right people as a guide, confidence it will actually work, strong data protections, and integration with your enterprise data, the risks of gen AI can easily outweigh the benefits."Jacksonville University Law Receives Provisional Accreditation by ABA
"Our goal and highest priority is to achieve provisional accreditation by the time our first class graduates," the school said.Boeing Turns to String of Big Law Firms for Latest Legal Troubles
While the aviation giant retained Perkins Coie to handle a new suit related to a door plug blowout, Boeing is also working with several others, such as Kirkland & Ellis and McGuireWoods, for ongoing matters.The Deadly Force 'PIT Maneuver' Case
Fourth Amendment law provides that police use of force during an arrest, stop or other seizure must be reasonable. Despite the seemingly straightforward nature of the reasonableness standard, §1983 excessive force claims often generate many difficult issues. The recent decision in 'Sabbe v. Washington County Board of Commissioners' illustrates some of these issues.Trending Stories