0 results for 'null'
'Ripped From the Headlines': A New Course in Law?
A law class involving some of today's most-read news stories might be a welcome alternative to other course requirements.Inside the 'Google-style' Tech Hub Driving Plaintiffs Firms' Growth
Litigation software has been a "game-changer" for plaintiff firms, revolutionizing how cases are processed and ultimately increasing their bottom line.The Secret to Morgan & Morgan's Growth? How This 'Google-style' Tech Hub Helps Expand Caseloads
Litigation software has been a "game-changer" for plaintiff firms, revolutionizing how cases are processed and ultimately increasing their bottom line.This 'Google-style' Tech Hub in Brooklyn Is Driving Plaintiffs Firms' Growth
Litigation software has been a "game-changer" for plaintiff firms, revolutionizing how cases are processed and ultimately increasing their bottom line.Buchanan Ingersoll Defends Geisinger Health in EEOC Action Over Alleged Disability Discrimination
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.View more book results for the query "*"
Fair Debt Collection Suit Over Disclosure of Consumer Info Removed to Fed Court
This suit was surfaced by Law.com Radar. Read the complaint here.Potter Anderson Lawyer to Present at HIPAA Privacy and Security Summit
At the Virtual HIPAA Privacy and Security Summit co-hosted by Widener University Delaware Law School and First Healthcare Compliance, Potter Anderson & Corroon partner Jennifer Gimler Brady is scheduled to present on "Business Associate Agreements: What They Are, Who Needs Them, and How They Can Go Sideways."People in the News—Nov. 15, 2021—Saxton & Stump, McNees
Attorney Sara Lynn Petrosky has joined Saxton & Stump as senior counsel, adding another resource for the firm's health care litigation and mitigation clients. The hire highlights a period of marked growth for the Pennsylvania-based firm.Miami-Dade Police Use Reward Cards to Solve Child Homicides
"Tools like this gets us justice," Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said of the baseball-like cards with QR codes on the back that will give the public information on unsolved homicides simply by using their cellphone cameras.