Don’t forget you can visit MyAlerts to manage your alerts at any time.
Get alerted any time new stories match your search criteria. Create an alert to follow a developing story, keep current on a competitor, or monitor industry news.
Thank You!
Don’t forget you can visit MyAlerts to manage your alerts at any time.
Allison Dunn is a reporter on ALM's Rapid Response desk based in Ohio, covering impactful litigation filings and rulings, emerging legal trends, controversies in the industry, and everything in between. Contact her at [email protected]. On Twitter: @AllisonDWrites.
April 1, 2024 | New Jersey Law Journal
Attorney Donald A. Ecklund, a partner with Carella, Byrne Cecchi, Brody & Agnello in Roseland, New Jersey, filed the suit on behalf of Randeep Singh Khalsa against The Children's Place, and its top leaders, on Feb. 28 in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey after the company announced its preliminary fourth-quarter fiscal year 2023 financial results.
By Allison Dunn
3 minute read
April 1, 2024 | New Jersey Law Journal
"We respectfully urge that the remaining vacancies in the vicinage be filled and offer to assist the legislative and executive branches with that important concern," Chief Justice Stuart Rabner said in a statement.
By Allison Dunn
2 minute read
February 14, 2024 | Connecticut Law Tribune
State and federal trial courts have split on whether punitive damages are available for contract claims outside of the insurance context, according to a recent ruling from U.S. District Judge Michael Shea of the District of Connecticut.
By Allison Dunn
6 minute read
December 1, 2023 | Law.com
"We find that Doe waived his claims of confidentiality under the Act by voluntarily and publicly disclosing his private health information in a public trial, and the qualified protective order under HIPAA did not preclude such waiver," Justice P. Scott Neville Jr., wrote.
By Allison Dunn
4 minute read
November 30, 2023 | New Jersey Law Journal
"Mr. Howie incurred honor code violations while attending law school for plagiarism and failing to disclose the honor code violation of another student who facilitated his plagiarism. Although he was previously admitted to the Bars of New Jersey and New York, he failed to disclose the violations to two of his four employers," Justice Michele D. Hotten wrote in a dissenting opinion, though the record did not reveal which employers knew or did not know.
By Allison Dunn
6 minute read
October 20, 2023 | Law.com
U.S. District Senior Judge Rebecca Beach Smith of the Eastern District of Virginia approved the final settlement agreement between a class of drug purchasers and pharmaceutical companies, Merck & Co., and Glenmark Pharmaceuticals, which also requires the defendants to pay one-third of the settlement fund in attorney fees, or $23 million, as well as $3.9 million in costs—as requested by plaintiffs' counsel.
By Allison Dunn
4 minute read
January 6, 2023 | Law.com
"Is the contract still able to be performed? If the answer is, 'No,' then there's certainly the argument that performance may be impossible or impractical, the purpose of it may have been frustrated, and so forth," said Peter Byrnes on behalf of the landlord.
By Allison Dunn
6 minute read
January 4, 2023 | Law.com
"Judge Moon's lengthy opinion reviewing the mountain of evidence we introduced at trial and affirming the jury verdicts on the culpability of each and every defendant confirms what really happened—motivated by the tenets of white supremacy, defendants engaged in a wide-ranging conspiracy to commit violence in Charlottesville in August 2017," plaintiffs counsel said.
By Allison Dunn
7 minute read
September 16, 2022 | Law.com
"My issue is telling my boss," attorney and Reddit user SomewhereBig4473 said in the r/LawFirm community. "I am constantly messing up little things and they think I'm not on top of my cases enough. Any advice would be appreciated. I'm crying even thinking about telling my boss. I don't know what to even say. I don't know to do [sic]. I hate myself for this."
By Allison Dunn
5 minute read
July 11, 2022 | Law.com
There was a resounding "no" to the hypothetical question posed July 7 to attorneys on Reddit by one user who said they're currently facing the dilemma in real life.
By Allison Dunn
4 minute read
Law firms & in-house legal departments with a presence in the middle east celebrate outstanding achievement within the profession.
The premier educational and networking event for employee benefits brokers and agents.
The Legal Intelligencer honors lawyers leaving a mark on the legal community in Pennsylvania and Delaware.
Atlanta s John Marshall Law School is seeking to hire one or more full-time, visiting Legal WritingInstructors to teach Legal Research, Anal...
Lower Manhattan firm seeks a premises liability litigator (i.e., depositions, SJ motions, and/or trials) with at least 3-6 years of experien...
Join the Mendocino County District Attorney s Office and work in Mendocino County home to redwoods, vineyards and picturesque coastline. ...
MELICK & PORTER, LLP PROMOTES CONNECTICUT PARTNERS HOLLY ROGERS, STEVEN BANKS, and ALEXANDER AHRENS