By Matthew B. Weisberg | August 6, 2024
Abuse of process is "the use of the legal process as a tactical weapon to coerce a desired result that is not the legitimate object of the process."
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | August 2, 2024
"Philips RS has spent hundreds of millions of dollars toward this recall and would have pursued a different and more focused recall had PSN not made its serious mistakes and greatly overestimated the potential threat to patients," the plaintiffs claimed.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Mathieu J. Shapiro, Hillary J. Moonay and Melissa M. Blanco | August 2, 2024
The question in the case was whether a prior Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision—A.S. v. I.S.—extended beyond its facts to create child support obligations in third parties who seek and obtain custody rights less than those held by a biological parent.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By David G. Mandelbaum | August 2, 2024
Because the courts have not fleshed out all the nuances of what the Environmental Rights Amendment means, this superficially procedural decision may have important implications for how that constitutional jurisprudence develops.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Michael Berry | August 1, 2024
The new statute builds on a model act proposed by the Uniform Law Commission and the collective experience of states with existing anti-SLAPP laws, while also accounting for distinctive features of our commonwealth's Constitution and Pennsylvania legal practice.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | July 31, 2024
"More fundamentally, before you think about a malpractice suit or a wrongful death suit, it enables somebody to have an avenue to get the judiciary involved when it comes to a point when the coroner or medical examiner are acting absolutely unreasonably," Podraza said.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | July 30, 2024
A lawyer for the plaintiff said the ruling "could create a lot of litigation for people who work for municipal governments."
By VerdictSearch | July 30, 2024
On Sept. 17, 2021, charging party Jarrell Murray-Sinicki interviewed for a job at an Olive Garden in Tarentum. Murray-Sinicki, who has ataxia, did not get the job. He claimed the restaurant did not hire him because of his disability.
By Matthew B. Weisberg | July 30, 2024
I am just getting started as a consumer debt collection attorney, is there anything I should be aware?
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By Aleeza Furman | July 26, 2024
"I handled this investigation properly from start to finish and my public statements were explicitly approved by the AG or his senior staff," former U.S. attorney David Freed contended.
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