Personal Injury & Medical Malpractice

  • December 17, 2025

    Litigation Funding Scheme Suit Dropped Against Pa. Atty

    The former client of a Pennsylvania attorney has ended his suit accusing the lawyer of conspiring with a litigation funder to charge him inflated legal fees to cover high-interest litigation finance loans, according to a federal court filing.

  • December 17, 2025

    Meta Blamed For Teens' Instagram 'Sextortion' Suicides

    The parents of a 16-year-old boy from Scotland and a 13-year-old boy from Pennsylvania blame Meta and Instagram for their children dying by suicide after being "sextorted" through the photo sharing platform, alleging in a lawsuit Wednesday that the social media companies know the app connects predators to children.

  • December 17, 2025

    29 State AGs Want Unified Meta Youth Addiction Trial

    A group of 29 states and their attorneys general is doubling down on a request in California federal court to hold a single, unified trial in their suit claiming Meta Platforms Inc. is designed to addict and harm minors, saying they have now identified another case where such a singular trial was held involving multiple attorneys general's claims.

  • December 17, 2025

    Calif. DMV Tells Tesla To Rename Autopilot Or Lose License

    The California DMV has said Tesla violated state law when it marketed its vehicles' "autopilot" and "full self-driving capability," calling the phrases misleading because the technology doesn't actually enable autonomous driving and ordering the company to change its marketing or face a suspension of its permit to sell vehicles in the state.

  • December 17, 2025

    Great American Says Cryo Unit Co. Hid Facts In Getting Policy

    Insurer Great American has gone to California federal court asserting that it doesn't owe coverage to a cryotherapy unit seller for an underlying lawsuit involving an alleged injury in a hyperbaric chamber at the company's subsidiary, arguing that the cryotherapy company never told the insurer it had a subsidiary.

  • December 17, 2025

    PG&E Electrical Transformer Bomber Gets 10 Years In Calif.

    A California federal judge Wednesday sentenced a San Jose software engineer to 10 years in prison for willfully bombing Pacific Gas & Electric Co. electrical transformers using homemade explosives in late 2022 and early 2023, the U.S. Department of Justice announced.

  • December 17, 2025

    Ill. Personal Injury Law Firm Sued Over Data Breach

    A Virginia man alleges in a new proposed class action in Illinois federal court that personal injury law firm TorHoerman Law LLC failed to prevent a cyberattack that exposed his private information to criminals, and that the firm didn't report the attack to the affected people for several months.

  • December 17, 2025

    Security Co. Loses $1M Coverage Bid For Pa. Bar Attacks

    A Pennsylvania federal court blocked a security company from seeking up to $1 million in coverage for ongoing litigation stemming from violent attacks against two Philadelphia bar patrons, finding the claims fell within an expansive policy exclusion for assault and battery.

  • December 17, 2025

    Philly Agency Sued Over Police Officers' Brain Cancer

    A public development corporation in Philadelphia has been sued by a city police officer and the estates of two deceased officers who developed brain cancer allegedly from toxic chemicals present in a converted Army building used as the police department's narcotics unit headquarters.

  • December 17, 2025

    Biggest Colorado Cases Of 2025

    In 2025, a Colorado federal judge blocked U.S. immigration agents from conducting warrantless arrests in the state without determining probable cause. Elsewhere, Colorado's justices articulated for the first time the burden of proof required for plaintiffs bringing tort cases against public entities. And Xcel Energy agreed to pay $640 million to settle claims that it caused or contributed to the state's 2021 Marshall Fire. Here's a look at some of the biggest decisions and cases that affected the state this year.

  • December 16, 2025

    Surgery Group Owes $52M For Man's Fall, Head Injury, Jury Told

    A lawyer for an Adobe software engineer told a Washington state jury in closing arguments Tuesday that he and his wife are owed up to $52 million from a medical provider, after the man's head slammed onto the floor of an operating room during surgery and causing allegedly permanent brain injuries.

  • December 16, 2025

    Gunmaker Fights To Exclude Other Accidents In Defect Trial

    A jury should not be allowed to see videos purporting to show instances where the Sig Sauer P320 pistol fired without the trigger intentionally being pulled, the gun manufacturer argued, telling a Kentucky federal court that these discharges are not substantially similar to the current case heading to trial.

  • December 16, 2025

    Colo. Justices Probe Progressive Over Fault In UM Crash Case

    The Colorado Supreme Court on Tuesday pressed counsel representing Progressive Direct Insurance Co. over how it was unable to argue a comparative fault defense in a state court case involving one of its policyholders who was in a car crash with an uninsured driver.

  • December 16, 2025

    LA Angels' Role In Pitcher's Fatal Overdose Goes To Jury

    A California state jury began deliberations Tuesday in a civil suit accusing the Los Angeles Angels of contributing to the fatal overdose of pitcher Tyler Skaggs, who died while the team was traveling for an away game from a combination of alcohol and fentanyl-laced pills provided by the team's communications director.

  • December 16, 2025

    Enviro Org.: 'Radioactive Road' Completion Doesn't Moot Suit

    The Mosaic Co.'s completion of a road that contains radioactive phosphogypsum doesn't mean a legal challenge to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's approval is moot, the Center for Biological Diversity told the Eleventh Circuit on Monday.

  • December 16, 2025

    10th Circ. Tosses Manslaughter Charge Over Jury Instructions

    The Tenth Circuit on Tuesday threw out a manslaughter case against a Republican former member of the Oklahoma Legislature whose motorcycle crash resulted in his girlfriend's death, finding that because a judge refused to elaborate on legal terms at issue in the case, a jury was not properly instructed on the law.

  • December 16, 2025

    Insurer Needn't Cover Casino Assault Dispute, NJ Panel Says

    A home insurer had no duty to defend or indemnify a man accused of injuring another man during an altercation at an Atlantic City casino, a New Jersey state appeals court affirmed Tuesday, finding that the incident did not constitute an occurrence.

  • December 16, 2025

    Hinge, Tinder Sued Over Matching Women With Serial Rapist

    A group of six women sued Hinge, Tinder and their parent company in Colorado state court Tuesday, saying they matched them with a serial rapist despite claiming to have banned him from their apps.

  • December 16, 2025

    Ex-Doc Avoids Prison For Dealing Ketamine To Matthew Perry

    A former physician who supplied Matthew Perry with ketamine before the "Friends" actor's overdose death avoided a prison sentence Tuesday and received eight months of home confinement from a California federal judge. 

  • December 16, 2025

    Court Tosses Ex-Olympian's Claims That QVC Stole Show Idea

    A New Jersey federal court tossed a former Olympian's lawsuit accusing the home-shopping channel QVC of stealing her idea for a show based on her lifestyle brand, ruling her claims lacked a meaningful connection to New Jersey to exercise jurisdiction.

  • December 16, 2025

    Trucking Co. Wants $44M I-35 Pileup Verdict Wiped Out

    A Missouri-based trucking company on Tuesday asked a Texas state court for a take-nothing judgment less than a week after a Dallas jury found it liable for the death of a motorist in a February 2021 pileup and awarded the man's family $44 million.

  • December 16, 2025

    Combs Accuser's Atty Sanctioned For AI-Hallucinated Citation

    A New Jersey federal judge has sanctioned an attorney, ordering him to pay $6,000 and to self-report to disciplinary authorities, after finding that he relied on a hallucinated artificial intelligence case citation and ignored repeated warnings to verify his filings in a civil suit accusing Sean "Diddy" Combs and others of sex trafficking.

  • December 16, 2025

    'Choking Challenge' Suit Against YouTube, TikTok Is Tossed

    A California federal judge has dismissed without leave to amend a suit by parents and an advocacy group alleging YouTube and TikTok's reporting and moderating tools are defective and fail to take down dangerous videos, saying the complaint suffers from the same deficiencies that got a previous version dismissed.

  • December 16, 2025

    Hagens Berman Sanctioned For Bot Errors In OnlyFans Case

    A California federal judge sanctioned Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP for submitting four briefs that contained errors blamed on ChatGPT while representing OnlyFans users pursuing proposed class fraud claims against the online platform, tossing the suit but allowing the users a chance to refile.

  • December 16, 2025

    Ex-Harvard Morgue Manager Gets 8 Years In Body Parts Case

    Former Harvard Medical School morgue manager Cedric Lodge was sentenced Tuesday in Pennsylvania federal court to eight years in prison after pleading guilty earlier this year to trafficking body parts from donated cadavers.

Expert Analysis

  • What Gene Findings Mean For Asbestos Mesothelioma Claims

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    Recent advances in genetic research have provided substantial evidence that significant numbers of malignant mesothelioma cases may be caused by inherited mutations rather than asbestos exposure — a finding that could fundamentally change how defendants approach personal injury litigation over mesothelioma, say David Schwartz at Lumanity and Kirk Hartley at LSP Group.

  • Series

    Brazilian Jiujitsu Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Competing in Brazilian jiujitsu – often against opponents who are much larger and younger than me – has allowed me to develop a handful of useful skills that foster the resilience and adaptability necessary for a successful legal career, says Tina Dorr of Barnes & Thornburg.

  • Oft-Forgotten Evidence Rule Can Be Powerful Trial Tool

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    Rule 608 may be one of the most overlooked provisions in the Federal Rules of Evidence, but as a transformative tool that allows attorneys to attack a witness's character for truthfulness through opinion or reputation testimony, its potential to reshape a case cannot be overstated, says Marian Braccia at Temple University Beasley School of Law.

  • Trucking Litigation Will Shift Gears In The Autonomous Era

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    As driverless trucks begin to roll out across Texas, a shift in how trucking accidents will be litigated is swiftly coming into view, with the current driver-centered approach likely to be supplanted by a focus on the design, manufacture and performance of autonomous systems, says Geoffrey Leskie at Segal McCambridge.

  • Series

    Power To The Paralegals: An Untapped Source For Biz Roles

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    Law firms looking to recruit legal business talent should consider turning to paralegals, who practice several key skills every day that prepare them to thrive in marketing and client development roles, says Vanessa Torres at Lowenstein Sandler.

  • Series

    Playing Poker Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Poker is a master class in psychology, risk management and strategic thinking, and I’m a better attorney because it has taught me to read my opponents, adapt when I’m dealt the unexpected and stay patient until I'm ready to reveal my hand, says Casey Kingsley at McCreadyLaw.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Becoming A Firmwide MVP

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    Though lawyers don't have a neat metric like baseball players for measuring the value they contribute to their organizations, the sooner new attorneys learn skills frequently skipped in law school — like networking, marketing, client development and case evaluation — the more valuable, and less replaceable, they will be, says Alex Barnett at DiCello Levitt.

  • Ruling On Pollutants And Indemnity Offers Insurers Mixed Bag

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    Both insurers and policyholders can reap benefits from a Georgia federal court's recent declaratory judgment decision, which broadly defined pollutants, but also deemed the duty to indemnify not yet ripe for adjudication, says Jena Emory at Morris Manning.

  • How Mass Arbitration Defense Strategies Have Fared In Court

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    As businesses face consumers who leverage arbitration agreements to compel mass arbitration, companies are trying defense strategies like batching arbitration cases to reduce costs, and escaping specific mass arbitrations without rejecting the process completely, with varying results in the courtroom, say attorneys at Montgomery McCracken.

  • Perspectives

    Reading Tea Leaves In High Court's Criminal Law Decisions

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    The criminal justice decisions the U.S. Supreme Court will announce in the coming weeks will reveal whether last term’s fractured decision-making has continued, an important data point as the justices’ alignment seems to correlate with who benefits from a case’s outcome, says Sharon Fairley at the University of Chicago Law School.

  • $38M Law Firm Settlement Highlights 'Unworthy Client' Perils

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    A recent settlement of claims against law firm Eckert Seamans for allegedly abetting a Ponzi scheme underscores the continuing threat of clients who seek to exploit their lawyers in perpetrating fraud, and the critical importance of preemptive measures to avoid these clients, say attorneys at Lockton Companies.

  • Series

    Teaching Business Law Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Teaching business law to college students has rekindled my sense of purpose as a lawyer — I am more mindful of the importance of the rule of law and the benefits of our common law system, which helps me maintain a clearer perspective on work, says David Feldman at Feldman Legal Advisors.

  • Choosing A Road To Autonomous Vehicle Compliance

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    As autonomous vehicle manufacturers navigate the complex U.S. regulatory landscape, they may opt for different approaches to following federal, state and local rules and laws, as they balance the tradeoffs between innovation, compliance and speed of deployment, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: Mastering Discovery

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    The discovery process and the rules that govern it are often absent from law school curricula, but developing a solid grasp of the particulars can give any new attorney a leg up in their practice, says Jordan Davies at Knowles Gallant.

  • Series

    Playing Guitar Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Being a lawyer not only requires logic and hard work, but also belief, emotion, situational awareness and lots of natural energy — playing guitar enhances all of these qualities, increasing my capacity to do my best work, says Kosta Stojilkovic at Wilkinson Stekloff.

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