0 results for 'null'
People in the News—Feb. 12, 2024—Marshall Dennehey, McNees
Medical malpractice litigator Alyson J. Kirleis has joined Marshall Dennehey's Pittsburgh office as a shareholder in the health care department.She Threatened to Kill the Judge in the Trump Case: 3 Years in Prison
Texas resident Tiffani Gish made death threats in 2022 against U.S. District Judge Aileen M. Cannon of the Southern District of Florida.Making the Right to Education a Reality for All Our Children
Last week we gathered in the Capitol in Harrisburg with other advocates, parents, educators, and students who are part of a statewide coalition called PA Schools Work to celebrate the anniversary of that pivotal ruling and to advocate for a proposed remedy to bring our school funding system into constitutional compliance.Artificial Intelligence: The New Weapon of Insider Threats
With all of its promise for increased efficiency and technological innovation, artificial intelligence must also be recognized as an evolving weapon to malicious insiders for AI-assisted fraud schemes.Combating Physician Shortages With Immigration Legislation
For years, the United States has faced a physician shortage. Population growth, aging, the COVID-19 pandemic, and recent medical legislative changes have highlighted that these shortages are not evenly distributed across all areas of the country.View more book results for the query "*"
New Jersey Passes Privacy Law: Non-Profits and Schools Beware
The federal government and Congress remain stalled on pragmatic issues and unable to address the novel question of Internet privacy. Unwilling to leave their citizen's privacy at risk, various states have jumped into the breach. On Jan. 16, 2024, New Jersey joined 12 other states by passing a comprehensive privacy law, New Jersey Senate Bill 332.When a Judge Has Been Misled (Unintentionally)
In this article, Joel Cohen analyzes a case in the public eye that is still pending. It will hopefully provide a teachable moment in the context of an artificial intelligence mistake that many litigators may conceivably encounter.Caution, Merging Ahead: The FTC and DOJ's New Merger Guidelines
Following months of anticipation, the FTC and Antitrust Division of the DOJ unveiled their new Merger Guidelines on Dec. 18, 2023. More than 30,000 stakeholders offered input on proposed changes to the Guidelines, which were previously updated in 2010.A New World: Why 'Per Quod' Claims Should Be Available for Unmarried Couples
"While legal marriage is currently a prerequisite to bringing per quod claims, the reasoning to preclude unmarried cohabitants from bringing per quod claims dates back to the 1982 case of 'Childers v. Shannon' and no longer applies to the current societal realities," writes Zachary M. Green.