The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Joshua A. Mooney | April 9, 2024
Liability under state WESCA claims turns on whether there was there an interception of a communication (and if so, where that interception took place), and whether the party whose communication was intercepted had granted consent. This article focuses on the third element—consent.
By VerdictSearch | April 9, 2024
On April 19, 2021, plaintiff Dana Brooks, 46, was involved in a rear-end accident with a vehicle operated by Michael Altomari.
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Stephanie Rodriguez | April 9, 2024
A little kindness and professionalism go a long way, even in the cutthroat world of law.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Theodore J. Zeller III | April 8, 2024
Many brewers want to take part in this evolving market of non-alcoholic beers. Unfortunately, many erroneously believe non-alcoholic products can be easily shipped and sold in commerce, much like drinking water or sodas. That assumption is faulty. Rather, non-alcoholic beers are regulated at both federal and state levels—and the differences at the state level are wide ranging.
The Legal Intelligencer | Analysis|News
By Amanda O'Brien | April 5, 2024
The firm, like a number of peers, saw its equity partnership contract and its nonequity partnership expand.
By Avalon Zoppo | April 5, 2024
While it's likely too early to see major swings in the law, the president's appointees' individual opinions on criminal law and qualified immunity show the impact the judges' diverse professional backgrounds have on their jurisprudence.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Larry E. Coben | April 5, 2024
Americans' reliance on and use of products designed, manufactured, and then imported to the United States from overseas creates significant legal issues when a consumer is injured, maimed or killed using one of these products. One very profound legal issue involves the challenge to obtain personal jurisdiction over a foreign manufacturer. We look briefly at this issue.
By Amanda O'Brien | April 4, 2024
Intellectual property attorney Robert McKinley is accused of secretly recording a woman at his New Jersey residences.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Mark Mailman | April 4, 2024
Seeking to put an end to, as Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) Director Rohit Chopra said, "background check and other consumer reporting companies creating flawed reputational dossiers that are then hidden from consumer view," the CFPB recently issued two advisory opinions to consumer reporting agencies.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By James C. Haggerty, Jeffrey Stanton and Dennis Coyne | April 4, 2024
While merely striking affirmative defenses that should not have been in the action in the first place may not be a sufficient deterrent to curb the filing of frivolous defenses, where the assertion of such baseless prophylactic defenses occurs in first party insurance litigation, such as uninsured (UM) or underinsured (UIM) motorist claims, it may result in much harsher repercussions.
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