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Personal Injury & Medical Malpractice
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October 24, 2025
Meta To Face Sanctions Bid Over Alleged Atty-Advice Fraud
Plaintiffs told the California federal judge presiding over social media-addiction multidistrict litigation that Meta should be sanctioned after a D.C. court found Meta likely engaged in "crime, fraud, and/or misconduct" when, on the advice of counsel, it modified its research into Facebook's effects on teens' mental health to limit its liability.
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October 24, 2025
Fla. Court Says Freight Broker Must Face Fatal Crash Suit
A Florida appeals court has revived a suit seeking to hold a trucking broker liable for a fatal crash involving a big rig hauling beer for Anheuser-Busch, saying the safety exception of the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act applies, so the negligence claim is not preempted by federal law.
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October 24, 2025
Groups Ask Justices To Limit Jurisdiction In Audi Defect Fight
A leading automotive industry group asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday to tighten the limits on specific personal jurisdiction over foreign defendants, saying a California state appeals court improperly held that personal injury plaintiffs could haul German auto giant Audi AG to court in California.
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October 24, 2025
USAA Defends Medical Reimbursement Cuts In Coverage Row
Two USAA units sought to toss two insureds' proposed class action accusing the companies of under-reimbursing their medical providers via claim handling software, telling a Washington federal court "there is no admissible evidence that plaintiffs' treatments were medically necessary and related to their auto accidents."
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October 24, 2025
Mich. Justices Won't Bar Tort Claims For Nonresident Drivers
Michigan's highest court on Friday refused to review a decision finding nonresidents who split their time between Michigan and another state may sue other drivers for pain and suffering damages even if they lack in-state auto insurance.
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October 24, 2025
Jury Awards $3.65M To Hotel Manager In Sex Harassment Suit
A former assistant manager at a Howard Johnson in Queens, New York, was awarded $3.65 million in damages after a federal jury found the hotel violated state and city anti-harassment laws by failing to address her complaints about residents' violent behavior and sexual comments.
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October 24, 2025
Edelson Looks To Drop Claims Against Ex-Girardi Keese Attys
Edelson PC has signaled plans to drop civil claims it lodged against two former Girardi Keese attorneys over Tom Girardi's theft of millions from clients, but the Illinois federal judge handling the case said Friday that he wants to discuss the firm's filing.
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October 24, 2025
Buyer Sues Target, Says Heated Blanket Burned Her
A Washington woman is suing Target Corp. and Berkshire Blanket & Home Co. Inc. in federal court, alleging she suffered severe burns to her toes when a heated blanket she bought overheated.
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October 24, 2025
Michigan Appellate Court Clears Up Landlord Liability Dispute
A Michigan appellate court ruled that tenants do not need to prove that their landlords were notified of unfit conditions at their units in order to bring claims under a state law requiring property owners to keep premises in reasonable repair.
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October 24, 2025
Admin Of $600M Derailment Deal Accused Of 'Alarming' Errors
Class counsel who inked a $600 million derailment settlement with Norfolk Southern called on an Ohio federal judge to revoke nearly $10 million in fees paid to the case's prior settlement administrator after an initial audit found "alarming, large-scale errors" in its claims management.
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October 24, 2025
Chicago Firm Accused Of Jailing Fla. Man Over $2.5M Fee
A Florida man has sued a Chicago firm over false imprisonment, alleging in a Miami-Dade County complaint that its attorneys spied on him remotely through a security camera installed at his Florida Keys home and had him arrested in order to collect $2.5 million in fees
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October 24, 2025
Hagens Berman Wants Judge DQ, Alleges Drug Lawsuit Bias
Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP asserted Friday that the Pennsylvania federal judge overseeing the long-running thalidomide birth-defect litigation in the state should be recused, alleging over 100 undisclosed private contacts between the court and special discovery master as an indication of bias.
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October 24, 2025
NFL Players' Race Bias Claims Tossed In Concussion Case
A Pennsylvania federal judge on Friday denied a motion by a group of 16 former football players who claimed that they were wrongly denied benefits under the National Football League's 2015 concussion injury settlement.
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October 24, 2025
Conn. High Court Snapshot: Discipline Powers Top Docket
When the Connecticut Supreme Court reconvenes Monday, it will consider two appeals with ramifications for the way attorneys are disciplined in the state and take up a wage case against Amazon that it previously punted due to a lawyer's family emergency.
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October 24, 2025
Abbott Wins Third Bellwether In Cow Milk Baby Formula MDL
An Illinois federal judge has given Abbott Laboratories Inc. its third bellwether win in multidistrict litigation alleging that its cow-milk-based baby formula gives infants necrotizing enterocolitis, saying the company successfully demonstrated that the plaintiff's proffered human-milk-based alternative would not be feasible.
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October 24, 2025
Paramedics Can't Use Mich. Law To Escape Negligence Suit
Evidence suggesting paramedics may have forged a patient's signature declining hospital transport for COVID-19 care and purported statements that responders didn't bring him in because hospitals were full are enough to overcome a state law that gives immunity to emergency responders, a Michigan appellate panel has determined.
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October 23, 2025
Delta Workers Can't Revive Claim Lands' End Uniforms Toxic
The Seventh Circuit refused to revive a suit Thursday against Lands' End brought by hundreds of Delta Air Lines employees who claim their Lands' End-produced Delta uniforms were toxic and made them sick, saying none of the employees' experts offered testimony establishing that the uniforms were defective.
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October 23, 2025
DC Judge Won't Let Meta Claw Back Discovery Docs
A D.C. Superior Court judge on Thursday said that attorneys for Meta told researchers to modify their research into its platform's effects on teens' mental health to curtail liability, finding that the crime-fraud exception to communications between attorney and client applies.
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October 23, 2025
Pa. Justices Won't Undo General Contractors' Injury Immunity
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court gave an injured worker a chance to convince the court to "overrule our decades-old precedent" that a general contractor shares subcontractors' immunity to suits brought under the state's workers' compensation law, but on Wednesday said he failed in his plight.
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October 23, 2025
Wash. Justices Point To Student SA Case In Hazing Death Suit
The Washington State Supreme Court appeared split Thursday on whether an Evergreen State university could be liable for a fraternity pledge's alcohol-related death after an off-campus hazing ritual, given the justices' 2024 ruling the same school had no duty to protect a student from rape at an off-campus party.
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October 23, 2025
OpenAI Reduced Suicide Safety Before Teen Died, Parents Say
OpenAI decided to remove some longstanding suicide prevention protocols and cut short its safety testing in the months before a California teenager died by suicide, according to an updated version of the wrongful death suit filed by the teen's parents in San Francisco County Superior Court.
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October 23, 2025
Boeing Asks Justices To Ax Texas Court Ruling In Union Suit
The U.S. Supreme Court should review the Texas Supreme Court's decision to let a Southwest pilots union sue Boeing after a pair of plane crashes in the late 2010s, Boeing argued, claiming Texas' high court erred by not deeming the lawsuit preempted by the Railway Labor Act.
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October 23, 2025
Ga. Panel Says Statute Noncompliance Dooms Crash Deal
The Georgia Court of Appeals reversed a trial court order granting a man's motion to enforce a settlement agreement in a personal injury suit where he was accused of hitting someone with his truck, finding the agreement wasn't a "valid offer capable of being accepted."
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October 23, 2025
Calif. Injury Atty Convicted Of Manslaughter Over DUI Crash
A Southern California personal injury attorney has been convicted of felony vehicular manslaughter for driving while intoxicated and causing a 2019 freeway collision that resulted in the death of a U.S. Postal Service big rig driver, according to Orange County prosecutors.
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October 23, 2025
Motocross Co., Insurer Settle Injury Coverage Dispute
A motocross event company and insurer have settled a coverage dispute over underlying claims that a child attending a 2022 championship event was paralyzed while swimming in an on-site creek, according to a filing in Tennessee federal court.
Expert Analysis
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Series
Playing Soccer Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Soccer has become a key contributor to how I approach my work, and the lessons I’ve learned on the pitch about leadership, adaptability, resilience and communication make me better at what I do every day in my legal career, says Whitney O’Byrne at MoFo.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Learning From Failure
While law school often focuses on the importance of precision, correctness and perfection, mistakes are inevitable in real-world practice — but failure is not the opposite of progress, and real talent comes from the ability to recover, rethink and reshape, says Brooke Pauley at Tucker Ellis.
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How Courts Are Addressing The Use Of AI In Discovery
In recent months, several courts have issued opinions on handling discovery issues involving artificial intelligence, which collectively offer useful insights on integrating AI into discovery and protecting work product in connection with AI prompts and outputs, says Philip Favro at Favro Law.
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Series
Adapting To Private Practice: From ATF Director To BigLaw
As a two-time boomerang partner, returning to BigLaw after stints as a U.S. attorney and the director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, people ask me how I know when to move on, but there’s no single answer — just clearly set your priorities, says Steven Dettelbach at BakerHostetler.
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Series
Playing Baseball Makes Me A Better Lawyer
Playing baseball in college, and now Wiffle ball in a local league, has taught me that teamwork, mental endurance and emotional intelligence are not only important to success in the sport, but also to success as a trial attorney, says Kevan Dorsey at Swift Currie.
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Ultra-Processed Food Claims Rely On Unproven Science
Plaintiffs' arguments that ultra-processed foods are responsible for the nationwide increase in certain chronic illnesses, though a novel approach to food-based personal injury claims, depend on theories that are still being tested, say attorneys at DLA Piper.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Skillful Persuasion
In many ways, law school teaches us how to argue, but when the ultimate goal is to get your client what they want, being persuasive through preparation and humility is the more likely key to success, says Michael Friedland at Friedland Cianfrani.
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How NY Appeals Ruling Alters Employers' Sex Abuse Liability
In Nellenback v. Madison County, the New York Court of Appeals arguably reset the evidentiary threshold in sexual abuse cases involving employer liability, countering lower court decisions that allowed evidence of the length of the undiscovered abuse to substitute as notice of an employee's dangerous propensity, say attorneys at Hurwitz Fine.
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Litigation Inspiration: How To Respond After A Loss
Every litigator loses a case now and then, and the sting of that loss can become a medicine that strengthens or a poison that corrodes, depending on how the attorney responds, says Bennett Rawicki at Hilgers Graben.
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The Metamorphosis Of The Major Questions Doctrine
The so-called major questions doctrine arose as a counterweight to Chevron deference over the past few decades, but invocations of the doctrine have persisted in the year since Chevron was overturned, suggesting it still has a role to play in reining in agency overreach, say attorneys at Crowell & Moring.
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Compliance Lessons From 1st-Ever Product Safety Sentences
A California federal judge’s recent sentencing of two former Gree USA executives in a landmark Consumer Product Safety Act case serves as a reminder of the federal government’s willingness to pursue criminal prosecution of individuals who fail to report safety hazards, as well as companies’ need to strengthen their reporting and compliance programs, say attorneys at Cooley.
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Series
Playing Mah-Jongg Makes Me A Better Mediator
Mah-jongg rewards patience, pattern recognition, adaptability and keen observation, all skills that are invaluable to my role as a mediator, and to all mediating parties, says Marina Corodemus.
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Series
Law School's Missed Lessons: Navigating Client Trauma
Law schools don't train students to handle repeated exposure to clients' traumatic experiences, but for litigators practicing in areas like civil rights and personal injury, success depends on the ability to view cases clinically and to recognize when you may need to seek help, says Katie Bennett at Robins Kaplan.
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Opinion
Juries Are Key In Protecting The Rule Of Law
Absent from the recent discourse about U.S. rule of law is the crucial role of impartial jurors in protecting the equitable administration of justice, and attorneys and judges should take affirmative steps to reverse the yearslong decline of jury trials at this critical moment, says consultant Clint Townson.
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Opinion
4 Former Justices Would Likely Frown On Litigation Funding
As courts increasingly confront cases involving hidden litigation finance contracts, the jurisprudence of four former U.S. Supreme Court justices establishes a constitutional framework that risks erosion by undisclosed financial interests, says Roland Eisenhuth at the American Property Casualty Insurance Association.