By Amanda Bronstad | March 5, 2024
Miami-Dade Circuit Judge William Thomas declared a mistrial after the jury sent him a note Tuesday afternoon that said: "We are hopelessly deadlocked with absolutely, positively, no way to resolve it."
Daily Business Review | Commentary
By Gregg M. Goldfarb | March 5, 2024
Products marketed toward Black women are more likely to cause cancer and other diseases, recent research has found.
By Jeremy Kidd | March 4, 2024
"In allowing this case to proceed, California outdid itself by threatening the core of pharmaceutical innovation in this country," according to Jeremy Kidd, law professor at Drake University Law School.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Larry E. Coben | March 4, 2024
Every day people are injured by defectively designed products. Many times, the person injured was not actually "using" the product.
By Amanda Bronstad | March 1, 2024
Jurors in Conway County Circuit Court, in Arkansas, gave Monsanto its 11th win on Friday in Roundup trials, and New Castle County Superior Court Judge Vivian Medinilla declared a mistrial after jurors in Delaware were deadlocked.
Delaware Business Court Insider | News
By Amanda Bronstad | March 1, 2024
Jurors in Conway County Circuit Court, in Arkansas, gave Monsanto its 11th win on Friday in Roundup trials, and New Castle County Superior Court Judge Vivian Medinilla declared a mistrial after jurors in Delaware were deadlocked.
Connecticut Law Tribune | News
By Emily Cousins | February 29, 2024
Couples struggling to conceive, particularly the plaintiffs in the CooperSurgical lawsuits, are worried their only option to have children is hanging by a thread, according to Tracey Cowan of Clarkson Law Firm, counsel for the plaintiffs.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Amanda O'Brien | February 29, 2024
Ken Fulginiti had been with Duffy + Fulginiti, now the Duffy Firm, for over three decades.
By Amanda Bronstad | February 28, 2024
San Diego County Superior Court Judge Kevin Enright on Monday denied Monsanto's posttrial motions and upheld the Oct. 31 verdict, but found the punitive damages were unconstitutional.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jeffrey F. Laffey | February 28, 2024
As a result of the court's ruling, defense attorneys will continue to be barred from introducing evidence of compliance with industry or government standards—not for lack of effort—and plaintiffs lawyers will be able to sharpen their arguments to focus on whether a product was defectively designed, without any fear of notions of "compliance" muddying the jury's focus at trial.
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