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LEGAL NEWSLINE

Thursday, October 3, 2024

Latest News


Chicago judge warns class action food lawyer about 'not close to viable' lawsuits

By John O'Brien |
CHICAGO (Legal Newsline) - A Chicago federal judge promises to keep an eye on a prolific class action lawyer who has filed more than 400 lawsuits since 2020.

Locked out, man chooses to drop from roof to balcony; Now he can sue landlord over his fall

By John O'Brien |
LOS ANGELES (Legal Newsline) - A California court has ruled that a man who was locked out of his apartment can sue the building's owner after he tried to scale down to his balcony from the roof but instead fell.

Transgender worker alleges he was fired after supervisor discovered biological gender

By Marian Johns |
TAMPA, Fla. (Legal Newsline) — A transgender worker alleges he suffered discrimination and was fired from a Florida company after a supervisor discovered his biological gender was female.

HP faces class action alleging 'Omen' line of laptops are defective

By Marian Johns |
SAN FRANCISCO (Legal Newsline) — HP is facing a class action alleging its Omen line of laptops are defective.

Thompson Coburn announces Mona Patel and Jessica Wang attend CCWC Law Firm Associates Conference

By Legal Newsline Report |
Thompson Coburn associates Mona Patel and Jessica Wang attended the 2023 Corporate Counsel of Women of Color Law Firm Associates Conference in New York.

Fla. court: Jury overshot punitive damages with $24 million verdict in tobacco case

By John O'Brien |
TAMPA, Fla. (Legal Newsline) - A major punitive damages award for a smoker's estate that sued Philip Morris USA and R.J. Reynolds Tobacco should be reduced, a Florida appeals court has ruled.

Targeting jurors by race 'poisons' the trial process, Texas Supreme Court rules

By John O'Brien |
AUSTIN, Texas (Legal Newsline) - Courts continue to grapple with the issue of race on juries, as Texas' highest court has found a trial was sullied after the plaintiff's attorney announced a preference for Black women jurors during selection.

Defendants in PFAS trial can't call high-profile plaintiff expert an advocate during bellwether trial

By John O'Brien |
CHARLESTON, S.C. (Legal Newsline) - Defendants in the coming bellwether trial over chemicals known as PFAS will not be able to test the motivations of one of the plaintiff's experts.

Lawsuit alleges stroller's defective frame can cause infants to fall

By Marian Johns |
BROOKLYN, N.Y. (Legal Newsline) — The manufacturer of the "Mockingbird" brand strollers is facing a class action lawsuit alleging the strollers are defective and pose a serious risk to infants.

Lawsuit: Florida inmate suffered severed finger from automatic door

By Marian Johns |
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (Legal Newsline)— An inmate at a Florida corrections facility is alleging negligence after he says a door at the facility slammed shut and severed his finger.

Shook Hardy Bacon LLP hosts Driving Diversity in Law and Leadership Conference Features Shook Partner on May 18, 2023

By Legal Newsline Report |
Shook Partner Veronica Gromada will deliver the opening remarks and serve as a panelist at the Centerforce Diversity Law Series, Driving Diversity in Law and Leadership Conference.

Littler Mendelson PC announces Addition of Jacqueline Langland in Growing Phoenix Office

By Legal Newsline Report |
Littler, the world’s largest employment and labor law practice representing management, has added Jacqueline Langland as the latest attorney to join its Phoenix office.

Approve REINs Act or continue to watch the 'administrative state run amok,' free market advocates say

By W.J. Kennedy |
A ditch filled with rainwater in a farmer’s field is fair regulatory game for Washington under proposed Clear Water Act rules that the Biden EPA resurrected from the Obama Administration.

General contractor not protected by Workers' Comp law in case of fatal accident

By Daniel Fisher |
BISMARCK, N.D. (Legal Newsline) - General contractors are “deemed” to be employers under one section of North Dakota’s workers compensation law but they don’t get immunity from lawsuits by employees of their subcontractors, the state’s highest court ruled.

Split Iowa Supreme Court overrules own precedent on money damages after just six years

By Daniel Fisher |
DES MOINES, Iowa (Legal Newsline) - The Iowa Supreme Court overruled a precedent allowing money damages for constitutional violations after just six years, deciding its earlier decision intruded on the powers of the legislature and proved unworkable in practice.

Lawsuit: Party guest on yacht drank fatal dose of illegal drug

By Marian Johns |
SAN FRANCISCO (Legal Newsline)— The organizers of a company yacht party are facing a lawsuit after a guest unknowingly drank a fatal dose of an illegal drug.

Lawsuit: Drunk driver wrecked cemetery in quest to visit father's grave

By Marian Johns |
JONESBORO, Ark. (Legal Newsline) — An Arkansas man who allegedly drove through a cemetery while intoxicated on two different occasions and caused extensive damage to headstones and landscaping is facing a lawsuit, in addition to criminal charges.

Troutman Pepper Hamilton Sanders LLP announces Troutman Pepper Shortlisted for Two Wind Investment Awards

By Legal Newsline Report |
Troutman Pepper and Partner Anne C. Loomis have been named among the 2023 Wind Investment Awards finalists.

Judge opens door to class-action allegations in social media censorship lawsuit

By Michael Carroll |
A federal judge has granted a motion to add class-action allegations in a case filed by the Louisiana and Missouri attorneys general alleging federal officials colluded with social media companies to deprive Americans of their First Amendment rights.

Jack Dorsey, Block management evade shareholder suit over purchase of Jay-Z's TIDAL

By John O'Brien |
WILMINGTON, Del. (Legal Newsline) - Shareholders of Block Inc. can't sue the company's management, including Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, for its purchase of Jay-Z's streaming music service TIDAL.