By Ross Todd | April 17, 2020
"There's no indication about what that market would look like and under that market whether Oakland would have gotten a team," said U.S. Chief Magistrate Judge Joseph Spero at a hearing in the case Friday.
By Amanda Bronstad | April 14, 2020
Two class actions filed in the Central District of California allege Six Flags has continued to charge monthly and season pass holders despite closing its amusement parks through mid-May.
By Mike Scarcella | Ross Todd | April 1, 2020
Lawyers from Seyfarth Shaw on Wednesday withdrew from representing the U.S. Soccer Federation in a pay-equity case after widespread criticism of a court filing that said players on the U.S. Women's National Team had less "skill" than their male colleagues. Latham & Watkins remains as the federation's counsel.
By Scott Graham | March 18, 2020
Bruce Brown Films, the company that merchandises "The Endless Summer," is accusing Nike and Footlocker of trading on the title and the movie poster from Brown's classic 1966 documentary.
By Ross Todd | March 12, 2020
At least two out of three judges for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit who previously revived the suit in an earlier appeal seemed sympathetic to the players' argument Thursday that the league was negligent in administering the way controlled substances were given to players.
By Angela Morris | March 11, 2020
Three former student-athletes have sued prominent track-and-field coach John Rembao, the NCAA and its board of governors. The lawsuit proposes a class of NCAA student-athletes, male and female, spanning back to 1992.
By Cheryl Miller | March 3, 2020
The ousted chief executive of the Recording Academy, Deborah Dugan, accused the firm of "handpicking" a Southern California attorney to investigate workplace claims leveled against her before she was fired while the firm simultaneously handled a lawsuit the Recording Academy filed against her.
By Ross Todd | February 26, 2020
"That YouTube is ubiquitous does not alter our public function analysis," wrote Judge M. Margaret McKeown in a decision upholding the dismissal of the conservative nonprofit educational and media organization's lawsuit against Google's YouTube.
By Alaina Lancaster | February 19, 2020
In a departure from prior case law, California's Second District Court of Appeal ruled that baseball organizations have a higher duty of care to spectators after a 12-year-old was hit in the face by a foul ball.
By Leigh Jones | Vanessa Blum | February 14, 2020
In this episode, The Careerist Vivia Chen talks with Squire Patton Boggs global managing partner Frederick Nance about the progress—and lack of it—in opportunities for African American attorneys in Big Law.
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