By Ross Todd | March 19, 2021
A federal judge in Indianapolis this week granted John O'Quinn's motion for a preliminary injunction finding that the government's messaging about the new program to resolve disputes over the 340B drug pricing program were "ambiguous, confusing, duplicitous, and misleading."
By Ross Todd | December 11, 2020
Hogan Lovells partners Virginia "Ginny" Gibson and Justin Bernick made a strong case that the Federal Trade Commission picked the wrong deal to challenge in the wrong town.
By Ross Todd | November 3, 2020
The plaintiffs' team at Zuckerman Spaeder and Psych Appeal scored an injunction set to run up to 10 years designed to prevent the nation's largest insurer from making coverage decisions for mental health and substance abuse coverage that don't comply with generally accepted standards of care.
By Ross Todd | November 2, 2020
David Boies and Michael Hausfeld both pointed to injunctive relief Blue Cross Blue Shield insurers agreed to as part of the settlement as a potential new driver of competition in the healthcare insurance market.
By Ross Todd | August 28, 2020
Three plaintiffs lawyers driving the deal—Fidelma Fitzpatrick of Motley Rice, Edward Wallace of Wexler Wallace, and Erin Copeland of Fibich, Leebron, Copeland & Briggs—say the judge overseeing the coordinated state court cases in California kept them moving forward even as pandemic closures pushed off scheduled trial dates this spring.
By Alaina Lancaster | August 6, 2020
At least two patients at California's Patton State Hospital have died from coronavirus, according to a lawsuit filed by a team at Covington & Burling and Disability Rights California.
By Ross Todd | July 31, 2020
If the "risk corridors" created under the Affordable Care Act don't immediately capture your attention, this likely will: $3.7 billion worth of recoveries obtained while working on contingency.
By Marcia Coyle | July 6, 2020
Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote in a Monday ruling that when a federal law has no severability clause there is a "strong" presumption that the unlawful part can be removed without disturbing the entirety of the law. The court next term will address the severability of the ACA's individual mandate.
By Jenna Greene | June 29, 2020
Litigation is not for the faint of heart. Just ask Kellogg, Hansen, Todd, Figel & Frederick partner Derek Ho.
New York Law Journal | News|Profile
By Jason Grant | June 18, 2020
In a recent interview, David Lat said he's back to full-time work and "open for business." But like many patients who are among the first to survive a severe COVID-19 infection, he said he'd wondered whether he'd ever be the same.
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