By Jenna Greene | December 17, 2019
After opening arguments in Massachusetts federal court and one day of powerful testimony from the victim, the groundbreaking case settled on what WilmerHale partner Cynthia Vreeland said were favorable terms to her client.
By Jenna Greene | December 12, 2019
None of the plaintiffs allege that the hotels actively participated in their trafficking. But did they knowingly benefit from it?
By Amanda Bronstad | October 3, 2019
The total settlement is between $735 million and $800 million, according to plaintiffs lawyers, who announced the deal Thursday. It resolves lawsuits brought over the 2017 mass shooting at MGM's Mandalay Bay Casino in Las Vegas.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 24, 2019
In its motion to dismiss, Marriott insisted the breach caused no harm to its guests and attached a declaration by a former government official who wrote: "A U.S. passport is virtually impossible to forge successfully."
By Alaina Lancaster | July 24, 2019
A Ninth Circuit panel ruled that the right to arbitration is forfeited when a party pursues a judicial forum, affirming a district court order rejecting a motion to compel arbitration in a class action brought against Aegis Senior Communities by residents.
By Greg Land | July 10, 2019
A plaintiffs attorney said there had been multiple complaints about squalid conditions and broken air conditioning at The Ralston, a once-swanky Columbus hotel that now serves as subsidized housing for the poor and disabled.
By Sue Reisinger | June 12, 2019
U.S. District Judge Patricia Seitz said she'd consider punishing individual executives with criminal fines and prison time over the world's largest cruise line failing to implement meaningful compliance reforms with a chief compliance officer.
By Jenna Greene | April 16, 2019
Jurors are supposed to be like old-fashioned children: Seen but not heard. That is, sit quietly, pay attention—and for heaven's sake, don't email a lawyer during trial.
By Jenna Greene | January 11, 2019
Roberta Kaplan and Sharon Nelles scored a big win for Airbnb in New York--one with significant implications for the protection of consumer information in the digital age.
By Charles Toutant | December 14, 2018
And when Kentucky's court of last resort reinstated a $100 million verdict against Chicago-based Grant Thornton, the nation's sixth-largest accounting firm, it was more as a deterrent against future misconduct than out of sympathy for the plaintiffs.
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