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News published on Legal Newsline in June 2019

LEGAL NEWSLINE

Saturday, November 23, 2024

News from June 2019


DEPARTMENT OF LABOR: U.s. Department of Labor Recovers $81,129 in Back Wages and Damages After Investigation Finds Wage Violations at Alabama Gulf Coast Restaurant

By Press release submission |
After an investigation by the U.S. Department of Labor's Wage and Hour Division (WHD), Bahama Bob's Beachside Café Inc. – a full-service restaurant based in Orange Beach, Alabama – has paid $81,129 in back wages and liquidated damages to 28 employees for violating overtime provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).

Facebook accused of censoring post about medical marijuana event

By Carrie Bradon |
NEW YORK (Legal Newsline) – Facebook is alleged to have censored a post advertising an online summit about medical marijuana and the cannabis industry.

Attorneys for J&J spar with opioids researcher over warning labels during Oklahoma trial

By John Sammon |
NORMAN, Okla. (Legal Newsline) – Attorneys for Johnson & Johnson on Friday during questioning of a researcher called as a witness by the State attempted to establish that the company’s production of opioid drugs was a government-regulated process with detailed warnings of possible addiction provided.

PEPPER HAMILTON LLP: Brent A. Morowitz Joins Pepper Hamilton's Funds Team in New York

By Press release submission |
Pepper Hamilton LLP announced that Brent A. Morowitz has joined the firm as of counsel in the Corporate and Securities Practice Group, resident in the New York office. Mr. Morowitz will also be a member of the firm’s Funds Services Group.

Opioid lawyers propose a global settlement team; Pa. attorney critical, says it's likely a ploy to boost their fees

By Daniel Fisher |
CLEVELAND (Legal Newsline) - Acknowledging it is “likely impossible” to negotiate individual settlements on behalf the nearly 2,000 cities and counties suing the opioid industry, plus thousands more watching from the sidelines, plaintiff lawyers have proposed a unique solution: A “negotiation class” designed to strike a global bargain on behalf of every municipality in the country.

Lawsuit says generic medications were contaminated with cancer-causing impurity

By Carrie Bradon |
CAMDEN, N.J. (Legal Newsline) – Two manufacturers and a distributor of generic medications are alleged to have sold contaminated products.

Man alleges Oreos aren't 'made with real cocoa,' as advertised

By Carrie Bradon |
SAN FRANCISCO (Legal Newsline) – The makers of Oreo cookies are facing a lawsuit from a California man over allegations the cookies' "made with real cocoa" label is false and deceptive.

Lawsuit challenges when doctors can refuse treatment based on personal views

By Carrie Bradon |
NEW YORK (Legal Newsline) – A group of states is suing the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services over a regulation that grants health providers the right to deny medical treatment and services based on the provider's personal views.

Trump's 'overt hostility' toward California caused termination of $1B high-speed rail grant, state claims

By Carrie Bradon |
SAN FRANCISCO (Legal Newsline) – California and its High-Speed Rail Authority are challenging the federal government's decision to terminate and de-obligate nearly $1 billion in federal grant money for the state's high-speed rail project, alleging the decision is a result of President Donald Trump's "overt hostility" to the state.

J&J finally gets chance to question opioids researcher during Oklahoma trial, fights 'kingpin' remark

By John Sammon |
NORMAN , Okla. (Legal Newsline) – On his third day of testimony, an opioids researcher was cross-examined by attorneys for Johnson & Johnson as the company defends itself from allegations that it is to blame for the nation's addiction crisis.

Mayors of Calif. cities will seek to protect their climate change cases with resolution at Hawaii conference

By Daniel Fisher |
HONOLULU (Legal Newsline) – Climate litigation isn’t on the official agenda when the U.S. Conference of Mayors meets in Honolulu at the end of the month, but it will probably loom in the background.

'It keeps changing': Oklahoma's opioid strategy is a 700-year-old English law that used to regulate wandering sheep

By Daniel Fisher |
NORMAN, Okla. (Legal Newsline) - The opioid trial now underway in a county courthouse in Oklahoma offers the first look at a legal strategy that could result in tens of billions of dollars in liability against the manufacturers and distributors of addictive narcotic painkillers in similar lawsuits nationwide.

Oklahoma witness in opioid trial says drug users not to blame for addiction crisis

By John Sammon |
NORMAN, Okla. (Legal Newsline) – During a second day of testimony, an opioid researcher questioned by private attorneys hired by the State of Oklahoma said opioid sellers like Johnson & Johnson sought to shift blame for a prescription drug epidemic onto those not responsible.

New electronic courthouse opens soon in Queen Anne's County

By Legal Newsline |
The new courthouse for the Circuit Court of Queen Anne’s County in Centreville, Maryland, is set to open its doors to the public on Monday, June 17.

Opioids researcher takes stand to criticize J&J in Oklahoma trial

By John Sammon |
NORMAN, Okla. (Legal Newsline) – An opioids researcher on Tuesday compared doctors over-prescribing opioids to the breaking of a figurative dam that flooded Oklahoma - and the country - during testimony in an important trial taking place in the state.

GREENBERG TRAURIG: Greenberg Traurig’s Henry Greenberg Sworn in as President of the New York State Bar Association

By Press release submission |
Henry M. Greenberg, a shareholder in the Albany office of global law firm Greenberg Traurig, LLP, was sworn in by Janet DiFiore, chief judge of the Court of Appeals and the state of New York, as the president of the New York State Bar Association(NYSBA) on Thursday, June 6. Founded in 1876, the NYSBA is the largest voluntary state bar association in the United States.

Marketing of J&J's opioids discussed at Oklahoma's big trial

By John Sammon |
NORMAN, Okla. (Legal Newsline) – A marketing specialist told attorneys for the State of Oklahoma on Monday that the rise in the sales of opioid drugs could be tied to a similar rise over the same period from 1996 to 2017 to deaths from overdose.

GREENBERG TRAURIG: Greenberg Traurig Strategically Grows Energy Practice with Addition of Rabeha Kamaluddin in Washington, D.C.

By Press release submission |
Rabeha Kamaluddin has joined global law firm Greenberg Traurig, LLP’s Washington, D.C. office as a shareholder in the firm’s Energy & Natural Resources and Global Litigation practices. Kamaluddin focuses her practice on energy regulation, compliance, and enforcement matters, regularly representing clients before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and various state public utility commissions. She joins from Dorsey & Whitney LLP, where she was a partner.

In New Hampshire, it's a secret which lawyers have been hired for PFAS lawsuits, and their contract could be challenged

By John O'Brien |
CONCORD, N.H. (Legal Newsline) – New Hampshire’s attorney general either will be hiring or has already hired a mystery law firm to handle the State’s lawsuits in the burgeoning field of PFAS litigation.

BRADLEY ARANT BOULT CUMMINGS: Bradley Partner Charles Roberts Jr. Among Winners of 2019 M&A Advisor Emerging Leaders Awards

By Press release submission |
Bradley is pleased to announce that Charles A. Roberts Jr., a partner in the firm’s Birmingham office, is among the recipients of the M&A Advisor’s 10th Annual Emerging Leaders Awards.