By Angela Morris | May 3, 2019
“Because so much of the testimony is going to be about what happened at the houses and seeing the actual impact on their homes and lives, the judge wants to be out there and experience it firsthand,” said Daniel Charest, plaintiffs' co-lead counsel.
By Max Mitchell | May 3, 2019
Judge Harvey Bartle III said that the complaints were "full of boilerplate language unrelated to the individual case," and were "the antitheses of how a proper federal complaint should be drafted."
By Jenna Greene | May 3, 2019
'While money is always at stake in a litigation, here our clients' reputations are at stake,' said Latham partners Laura Washington and Marvin Putnam.
By Amanda Bronstad | May 2, 2019
At least three federal judges in multidistrict litigation have asked plaintiffs lawyers to disclose third-party litigation funding. “The minute you have an involvement of someone else," U.S. District Judge Paul Grimm, in the Marriott data breach cases, told Law.com, "you have the benefit of funding, but with that funding, there is a question about is there to be control or not.”
By Amanda Bronstad | May 1, 2019
U.S. District Judge Edward Chen on Friday is set to hear oral arguments on the settlement's final approval, including a request for $59 million in attorney fees and $7 million in costs.
By Amanda Bronstad | April 29, 2019
A federal judge in Maryland has appointed 14 lawyers to lead class actions brought by consumers over Marriott Inc.'s data breach last year.
By Amanda Bronstad | April 25, 2019
At least four class actions have been filed, including one against Amazon.com, alleging that the recall of 4.7 million Rock 'n Play products is inadequate.
By Amanda Bronstad | April 25, 2019
Firm principals Joe Cotchett and Mark Molumphy denied that they violated a protective order, which Apple has insisted requires sanctions—specifically, their removal from their appointed leadership positions in the iPhone throttling cases.
By Tony Mauro | April 24, 2019
Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. wrote for the majority, overturning a decision by the Ninth Circuit that allowed a class arbitration to proceed because the arbitration agreement at issue was ambiguous.
By Greg Land | April 23, 2019
New filings indicate two FCRA cases are being combined in Georgia in preparation for a settlement.
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