Cvs
Big Business |
Business
3195 Linwood Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45208
Recent News About Cvs
View More
-
BROOKLYN, N.Y. (Legal Newsline) – Flushable wipes sold at CVS are clogging toilets, a class action lawsuit says.
-
LOS ANGELES (Legal Newsline) – CVS is accused of selling hand-sanitizer that fails to live up to the claim that it kills 99.99% of germs.
-
CENTRAL ISLIP, N.Y. (Legal Newsline) - A former Drug Enforcement Agency official said Tuesday that nearly every dose of Oxycontin painkiller sold in two New York counties was likely diverted to improper use, a stunning total which if true would grossly exceed any other known estimate.
-
CLEVELAND (Legal Newsline) - Ohio must turn over the names of pharmacies and physicians that filled millions of opioid prescriptions in the state but haven’t been named as defendants in litigation over the narcotics, the judge overseeing federal multidistrict opioid litigation has ruled.
-
CLEVELAND (Legal Newsline) - Pharmacies defending themselves against claims they filled excessive numbers of opioid prescriptions have asked the judge overseeing federal multidistrict litigation to again order the state of Ohio to turn over data showing the specific physicians and pharmacies that supplied narcotics into the state.
-
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (Legal Newsline) – Blue Cross Blue Shield claims that CVS has been scamming it for years by charging it too much for prescriptions.
-
CINCINNATI (Legal Newsline) - Facing a string of damaging rulings by the judge overseeing sprawling litigation against them, some of the nation’s leading retail pharmacy chains resorted to the equivalent of a Hail Mary pass
-
CLEVELAND (Legal Newsline) - A federal appeals court has rebuked the judge overseeing thousands of opioid lawsuits against retail pharmacy chains, saying he overstepped his authority by allowing plaintiffs to amend their claims to include allegations they improperly filled prescriptions for narcotics.
-
CINCINNATI (Legal Newsline) - The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has temporarily halted a federal judge’s order requiring the largest U.S. pharmacy chains to turn over more than a decade’s worth of nationwide prescription records, although the court refused to halt production of prescriptions for the state of Ohio.
-
CINCINNATI (Legal Newsline) – The ACLU is telling a federal appeals court that the judge overseeing thousands of opioid cases created a serious privacy issue when he ordered pharmacies to turn over 13 years’ worth of patient records.
-
CINCINNATI (Legal Newsline) - The nation’s largest pharmacy chains have asked a federal appeals court to block an order requiring them to turn over more than a decade of nationwide prescription data, saying it could compromise the privacy rights of millions of consumers.
-
CLEVELAND (Legal Newsline) - A federal judge has ordered the nation’s leading pharmacy chains to turn over billions of nationwide prescription records going back 14 years - even as the American Civil Liberties Union and some states attack similar requests by the government as overbroad and an invasion of privacy.
-
CLEVELAND (Legal Newsline) - Saying they have been unfairly targeted because of their deep pockets, pharmacies facing trial in opioid multidistrict litigation in Ohio later this year filed claims against hundreds of unnamed practitioners who may have written improper prescriptions for addictive painkillers.
-
WILMINGTON, Del. (Legal Newsline) - A Delaware judge has refused to certify the state’s appeal of an order dismissing its opioid claims against Walgreens, at least temporarily upholding a rare industry victory in litigation over the opioid crisis.
-
CLEVELAND (Legal Newsline) - Pharmacy companies facing thousands of lawsuits over allegedly improper opioid prescriptions failed to convince the federal judge to prohibit out-of-court discussions with plaintiff lawyers that some defendants believe have affected them unfairly.
-
Defendants have asked the federal judge overseeing nearly 2,000 opioid lawsuits by cities and counties to recuse himself, saying he has demonstrated clear bias toward the plaintiffs and toward obtaining a multibillion-dollar settlement instead of holding trials to determine the merits of their claims.