By Ross Todd | March 8, 2024
A federal judge in Chicago last week gave preliminary approval to three more settlements in the price-fixing case being handled by Bob Gilbert of Gilbert Litigators & Counselors, Ted Normand of Freedman Normand Friedland, and Eric Cramer of Berger Montague.
By Ross Todd | January 31, 2023
Daniel Kramer of Kramer Trial Lawyers and Robert Glassman of Panish | Shea | Boyle | Ravipudi gave students at their alma mater an experiential introduction to picking a jury during the school's Spring intersession.
By Ross Todd | January 9, 2023
"Using Zoom even as we come out of the pandemic is really a game changer for working parents," says Gordon & Rees Bay Area managing partner Marie Holvick.
Litigation Daily | Best Practices
By Ross Todd | September 21, 2022
Even Phillips—who in nearly four decades at Sidley Austin has more U.S. Supreme Court arguments in private practice than anybody—felt like he was frozen to his seat during his first argument at the High Court.
By Ross Todd | August 16, 2022
U.S. District Judge Matthew Kennelly in Chicago denied a bid by 17 elite private universities to knock out claims they colluded in ways that held down the amount of need-based aid going to undergraduates.
By Ross Todd | February 15, 2022
Lawyers at Berger Montague, FeganScott, Gilbert Litigators & Counselors, and Roche Freedman accuse the universities of participating in a price-fixing cartel that artificially inflated what students who receive financial aid paid for undergraduate studies.
By Ross Todd | February 3, 2022
Big multidefendant antitrust lawsuits usually mean a Big Law roll call. That's definitely the case with a new suit targeting elite universities.
By Ross Todd | January 28, 2022
David O'Neil of Debevoise & Plimpton and Paul Donnelly of Donnelly & Gross scored a free speech victory for six University of Florida professors in a case that has potential national implications.
By Ross Todd | November 18, 2021
Kirkland & Ellis was awarded statutory attorney fees as part of a $577 million settlement the state reached with the firm's clients, a coalition of students, faculty and alumni of Maryland's four public historically Black colleges and universities.
By Ross Todd | October 21, 2021
A spokesperson for the governor called the suit part of "activist groups attempt to come into Oklahoma and challenge our laws and our way of life." Schulte's Gary Stein said that sort of "ad hominem attack" was "scary," but "reflects the fact that there may not have been much of a defense on the merits."
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