By Tom McParland | April 2, 2019
According to the complaint, Santa Monica, California-based TrueCar, which operates an internet-based platform for car pricing, disclosed the possibility of changes as merely a risk to its bottom line for nearly a year, when in fact it knew that they were already underway.
By Jenna Greene | April 2, 2019
As a pair of wins by Morgan Lewis and Latham show, securities class action plaintiffs can only stretch the event-based theories so far.
By Kristen Rasmussen | March 28, 2019
Boca Raton, Florida-based Office Depot Inc. and its subsidiary Support.com agreed to pay $25 million and $10 million, respectively, to settle allegations that they tricked customers into spending millions of dollars on repairs by deceptively claiming that they had found malware symptoms or infections on consumers' computers, an alleged scheme first flagged by store employees, the FTC said.
By Jenna Greene | March 12, 2019
The Second Circuit order made nary a ripple when issued. But it sealed a quietly emphatic victory for Kirkland & Ellis partner Sandra Goldstein.
By Amanda Bronstad | February 15, 2019
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit could be the first appeals court to rule on whether Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. v. Superior Court of California applied to class actions.
By Amanda Bronstad | January 31, 2019
The DOJ filed notices Jan. 25 in class actions against two railroad equipment suppliers and cases involving Arby's, Carl's Jr. and Auntie Anne's franchises.
By Jenna Greene | January 14, 2019
Pro se litigants usually fare terribly in court. So how did a young immigrant from Guinea who was fired from his job at Whole Foods defeat a motion for summary judgment by employment law experts from Greenberg Traurig?
By Scott Graham | January 4, 2019
Eighteen months after ruling a statutory ban on "disparaging" marks unconstitutional, the justices will address a related provision banning "scandalous" and "immoral" marks.
By Jason Grant | October 29, 2018
Harris Jewelry, with stories near and on military bases across the country, allegedly preyed upon and misled active-duty service members, often selling them pieces marked up 600 to 1,000 percent, including special commemorative items such as the “Mother's Medal of Honor.”
By John Council | October 18, 2018
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has refused to allow a mother to sue Walmart after her daughter purchased a large quantity of aerosol dust remover from one location over the course of 27 hours and was later found dead in the parking lot of that store from inhalant abuse.
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