The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jay Halt and Josh Schmid | March 27, 2019
Damage assessments of the partial government shutdown, the longest in U.S. history, place the cost of the government shutdown to the U.S. economy between $6 billion and $11 billion. Although the threat of another shutdown seems to have passed for now, speculation continues to abound as to what catastrophes await in the event of another government shutdown.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jeffrey Campolongo and Ashley Dabb | March 25, 2019
The lawsuit, which is seeking damages, back pay and adjustment of their wage and benefits rate, also seeks class certification to include all female professional players since 2015. The USWNT recently filed the complaint, appropriately enough, on International Women's Day.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Nicole D. Galli | March 19, 2019
These top three areas of risk include: the absence of an IP strategy; failure to protect trade secrets; and relying on business people or lawyers who are not IP litigators to send out cease and desist letters.
By VerdictSearch | February 21, 2019
In April 2014, plaintiff Timothy Wysocki, 64, a plumber and pipe fitter, was diagnosed with colorectal cancer. He claimed that the cancer stemmed from his work with packing manufactured and supplied by John Crane Inc. and J.A. Sexauer Manufacturing Co. from the mid-1970s to the early 1980s.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Nicole D. Galli | February 20, 2019
Each form of intellectual property (IP) protection—trademarks, trade dress, copyrights, design and utility patents and trade secrets—has an important role to play in protecting brands and innovation in the food and beverage industry.
By The Legal Intelligencer | January 28, 2019
In The Legal's Products Liability, Mass Torts & Class Action, read about economic loss after Dittman, 5-year-old Tincher and what to do when automobile safety features just don't work.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Larry E. Coben | January 25, 2019
The marketing of safe products should ordinarily include all the available safety features warranted to protect consumers from harm. When a manufacturer decides to make safety an option, then it takes the risk that it will be liable for harm caused by putting profits before safety.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Stephen J. Finley and Jonathan T. Woy | January 25, 2019
Five years ago, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court undertook to modernize Pennsylvania products liability law in its seminal decision of Tincher v. Omega Flex, 104 A.3d 328 (Pa. 2014).
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Terry M. Henry | January 22, 2019
Products liability litigation has become more sophisticated during the 21st century as products themselves have become more complex, interconnected and regulated.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Steve Schain | January 17, 2019
Derived from identical plants, vastly easier to cultivate, and profoundly more profitable, industrial hemp always lacked legalized marijuana's sizzle.
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