By Ross Todd | September 18, 2020
Angela Zambrano and Yolanda Cornejo Garcia of Sidley Austin got about as definitive a defense win as possible.
By Amanda Bronstad | July 27, 2020
U.S. District Judge M. Casey Rodgers refused to grant summary judgment based on 3M's government contractor defense in the first substantive ruling to come out of the multidistrict litigation over allegedly defective earplugs.
By Jenna Greene | June 12, 2020
The decision "recognizes that plaintiffs must bring their claims in a state that has real connections to those claims," Seitz said. "As a result, state courts will not expend their judicial and financial resources on cases that have no connection to that state or its citizens."
By Jenna Greene | May 20, 2020
You know the old saying, 'If you don't succeed, try, try again'? Sometimes that just means you fail twice.
By Jenna Greene | April 26, 2020
The fight between WeRide and AllRide, which are competing to bring self-driving cars to the Chinese market, stands out for what U.S. District Judge Edward Davila of the Northern District of California described as a "staggering" amount of destruction of potentially discoverable material.
By Jenna Greene | April 5, 2020
Fear is a central animating force in recent lawsuits filed by the National Rifle Association and other pro-gun groups against officials in New York and California, demanding that firearms retailers be designated as essential businesses and allowed to remain open during the pandemic.
By Jenna Greene | March 10, 2020
It's too soon to say if binding arbitration will be a viable new path for merger challenges, but the historic case gave Trump antitrust enforcers a way to come across as both pro-enforcement and pro-business—not an easy needle to thread.
By Jenna Greene | December 10, 2019
How could Warren in good conscience oppose asbestos poisoning victims who were fighting to bring new claims against insurance giant Travelers? The nuanced answer: Easily.
By Jenna Greene | December 9, 2019
Firm lawyers did a masterful job reframing the case as "an argument between two men," as Alex Spiro said in his opening. But William Price delivered the death blow with his cross examination.
By Jenna Greene | December 6, 2019
'We have grown used to flying under the radar, even though we have been prevailing in high profile cases since inception,' Noah Hagey said. 'You might say that underestimation is one of our strategic advantages.'
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