By Adolfo Pesquera | November 28, 2022
"When a court wades into the sensitive area of a blanket exposure of a minor's mental health records there has to be some basis for that," said plaintiffs attorney Mark Sparks.
By Adolfo Pesquera | November 28, 2022
"The plaintiffs in this suit have not plausibly alleged that they're any worse off financially because defendants' fraud allowed Southwest and American Airlines to keep flying the MAX 8 during the class period," the Fifth Circuit said.
By Michael A. Mora | October 20, 2022
David Boies, chairman and managing partner at Boies Schiller Flexner, is co-lead counsel in the federal district court class action against Mark Cuban and his NBA franchise.
By Allison Dunn | October 19, 2022
"[The] plaintiffs' only purported basis for economic injury stems from their allegation that the Baby Food Products posed a threat of future harm...," Judge Michael S. Nachmanoff wrote, dismissing the case.
By Amanda Bronstad | October 18, 2022
Dozens of lawsuits allege Kia and Hyundai failed to include a common security feature in their vehicles, leading to a surge of car thefts aided by viral videos on TikTok and YouTube demonstrating exactly how to steal them.
By Amanda Bronstad | September 8, 2022
Facebook has raised an arsenal of legal defenses that could swiftly dismiss lawsuits alleging younger users have become addicted to social media, leading to mental health problems and, in some cases, suicides.
By Adolfo Pesquera | August 19, 2022
On every plaintiff claim and defendant affirmative defense, the First District found it could not reach conclusions on fact issues because the record was so sparse.
By Adolfo Pesquera | August 4, 2022
Moser v. Dillon Investments is one of just two recent cases to rely on a Texas Supreme Court 2020 ruling that clarified a distinction between a party's standing to sue versus their capacity to sue.
By Adolfo Pesquera | July 20, 2022
FDA did consider petitioners' device type, and it concluded (reasonably) that what truly impacts youth smokers is flavor preference, not device preference, the Fifth Circuit said.
By Amanda Bronstad | July 18, 2022
At a July 15 hearing, U.S. District Judge William Orrick agreed with plaintiffs attorneys to replace the first bellwether trial against Juul after the FDA banned its electronic cigarettes last month.
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