By Jane Wester | September 18, 2020
Under U.S. District Judge Frederic Block's order, the dogs will stay at a kennel facility while the suit moves ahead. The plaintiff argues that the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention improperly denied entry to the dogs and lacked an adequate appeal process.
By Ryan Tarinelli | September 14, 2020
The move is one of the latest back and forths in a lawsuit over whether a couple should be able to host a wedding celebration that exceeds the gathering limit.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Dorothy R. Auth and Michael B. Powell | September 14, 2020
Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine represents one of our best hopes for overcoming the pandemic; however, several unresolved patent issues are brewing in the background, underlying the substantial risks and significant potential rewards of Moderna's vaccine.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By C. Raymond Radigan and Lisa Fenech | September 11, 2020
In this Trusts and Estates law column, C. Raymond Radigan and Lisa Fenech discuss the steady demand for donated organs and the declining supply.
By Ryan Tarinelli | September 4, 2020
Attorneys chipped away at each other's arguments during a U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals proceeding Friday, making their points in a case over whether a couple should be able to host a wedding celebration that exceeds a 50-person gathering limit.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Dana E. Heitz | September 4, 2020
For many who have lost loved ones to the coronavirus, the notion that anything could compensate them for their pain will be laughable. But there could be some cases for which a shadow of a remedy is available. And if it is, it may flow from the right of sepulcher. This article explores this "ancient right."
By Ryan Tarinelli | September 1, 2020
A group of firework company owners have agreed to dismiss their federal lawsuit over rules aimed at hampering transmission of the coronavirus.
By Ryan Tarinelli | August 27, 2020
State officials have released data showing there were more than 6,500 confirmed or presumed coronavirus deaths at nursing homes or adult care facilities across the state.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Max Mitchell | August 25, 2020
In a proposed class action lawsuit filed Tuesday in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, two former Pittsburgh Steelers allege that the league has been improperly using race and ethnicity information to undercut their cognitive impairment claims.
By Ryan Tarinelli | August 21, 2020
A federal appeals court on Friday ruled against a couple who sought to hold a wedding celebration that would have exceeded a New York gathering limit of 50 people.
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