By Michael A. Mora | March 8, 2023
"No one should be subjected to this unreasonable risk of harm just by getting products they need on a daily basis," said Ryan Yaffa, who is among the attorneys who represent the plaintiff.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Brian Lee | March 8, 2023
Reasons that make New York a likely target include its scaffold law, which accounts for nearly half of all nuclear verdicts, the report said.
By Emily Saul | March 7, 2023
While defamation lawsuits relating to allegations of sexual assault are still filed, the look-back windows for time-barred claims have created ambiguous areas of coverage for some insured.
By Emily Saul | February 15, 2023
The firms are also asking the judge to establish a steering committee appointing retired judge Stanley Green to preside over the matter until trial.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Michael Marciano | February 10, 2023
Firm attorney and owner-president Keith Trantolo and Robert Peragine, a Trantolo & Trantolo alum now living and working in Long Island, agreed that the dissection of New York's Cellino & Barnes had created an opening they could fill.
By Emily Saul | February 9, 2023
DA Bragg's office confirmed they're investigating the ban, which is currently also facing probes by the Attorney General's Office and the New York State Liquor Authority.
By Emily Saul | February 7, 2023
The change in policy affects those who work for firms involved in lawsuits against Tao Group Hospitality, an umbrella company for various restaurants and nightclubs—and comes as MSGE considers selling its majority ownership in the group.
By Emily Saul | February 6, 2023
"Neither side has, at this point, engaged in the type of extreme behavior required to impose sanctions," Manhattan Supreme Court Justice David Cohen wrote in his ruling. Wigdor had fired back with its own motion seeking sanctions against opposing counsel.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Dean L. Pillarella | January 30, 2023
A discussion of CPLR 3212(g), a "little is known and seldom used procedural device contained within CPLR 3212 that serves alongside its more frequently used legal cousins—the motions for summary judgment and partial summary judgment."
By Brian Lee | January 27, 2023
Cuomo's attorneys, citing the Public Officers Law and state Executive Law, sued Attorney General Letitia James in August, saying she was obligated to prosecute and defend all actions in which the state is interested.
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