Personal Injury & Medical Malpractice

  • April 29, 2026

    Tupac's Family Files Wrongful Death Suit, Citing New Info

    Nearly 30 years after the fatal shooting of Tupac Shakur, the rapper's stepbrother has filed a wrongful death lawsuit in Los Angeles County Superior Court against a man about to go on trial for the murder and unidentified others, suggesting that revelations in a recent Netflix documentary implicate Sean Combs in Shakur's murder.

  • April 29, 2026

    OpenAI Sued Over ChatGPT Role In Canada School Shooting

    Seven families of the victims of one of the deadliest mass shootings in Canadian history on Wednesday hit OpenAI with suits in California federal court alleging that ChatGPT's design is inherently dangerous and that the artificial intelligence company decided not to warn law enforcement about the shooter's violent interactions with ChatGPT.

  • April 29, 2026

    6th Circ. Skeptical Of Immunity Denial In Teen Suicide Suit

    A panel of the Sixth Circuit heard arguments Wednesday from a school resource officer and a high school principal seeking to overturn a district court's refusal to grant them qualified immunity from a lawsuit alleging their threats of expulsion and possible prosecution during a disciplinary meeting contributed to a 14-year-old Michigan student's suicide hours later. 

  • April 29, 2026

    Texas Couple Drops Data Suit Against Personal Injury Firm

    A Houston couple who accused a law firm and a since-dismissed Progressive unit of conspiring to share the private information of car crash victims has dropped federal claims against the firm after reportedly finding no evidence that it engaged in the conduct they alleged. 

  • April 29, 2026

    2nd Circ. Stands By $83M Carroll Verdict As Full Court Splits

    In a splintered ruling Wednesday, the full Second Circuit refused to rehear President Donald Trump's appeal challenging an $83.3 million verdict for defaming writer E. Jean Carroll in his response to her sexual abuse allegations.

  • April 29, 2026

    Atty Denies Defaming Sig Sauer In Gun Safety Trial Comments

    A Connecticut attorney's claims that a Sig Sauer pistol is dangerous and defective aren't defamatory because they are opinions grounded in expert analysis presented during personal injury litigation, he argued Wednesday in a motion to dismiss the gunmaker's counterclaims in federal court against him.

  • April 29, 2026

    Ex-Dispensary Worker Sues Over Sexual Harassment, Firing

    A Michigan woman is suing a dispensary where she used to work and its affiliates in federal court, alleging they allowed her to be sexually harassed and then disciplined and fired her for reporting it.

  • April 29, 2026

    Medical Equipment Co. Settles Patient Overbilling Claims

    Patients who claim Pennsylvania-based AdaptHealth Corp. overcharged them for returned medical equipment have reached the final version of a class settlement and will soon submit it to a North Carolina federal court for approval, they told the court this week.

  • April 29, 2026

    Justices Rule NJ Info Demand Chilled Anti-Abortion Speech

    The U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday unanimously revived an anti‑abortion pregnancy center network's constitutional challenge to a New Jersey subpoena seeking years of donor information, holding that the state's demand infringed free speech.

  • April 28, 2026

    Defunct NJ Biz Fined $8M For Selling Dangerous AC Units

    A New Jersey federal judge Tuesday sentenced a shuttered home appliance company to pay an $8 million criminal fine after it pled guilty to failing to immediately report that portable air conditioners it imported and sold had caught fire.

  • April 28, 2026

    Boeing Says 737 Max Plaintiffs Can't Seek Punitive Damages

    The Boeing Co. has told a Washington state court that dozens of plaintiffs suing over a 2024 door plug blowout on a 737 Max flight are ineligible to seek punitive damages in the case because such damages aren't allowed under Washington law.

  • April 28, 2026

    Texas Panel Probes $557M Union Pacific Train Injury Verdict

    A Texas appeals panel Tuesday considered whether jurors were given the wrong liability standard before issuing a $557 million verdict against Union Pacific Railroad Co. over a woman who was hit by one of its trains, putting into question a roughly $73 million judgment.

  • April 28, 2026

    Discrimination Damages Shot Down In OSU Doctor Abuse Suit

    An Ohio federal judge ruled Tuesday that former student-athletes who say they were sexually abused by a former sports doctor at Ohio State University may seek damages for several categories available for private Title IX actions, but cannot be compensated for the "experience of being discriminated against."

  • April 28, 2026

    Justices Wary Of Cisco's Bid To Avoid Aiding Torture Claims

    The U.S. Supreme Court seemed skeptical Tuesday of Cisco Systems Inc.'s argument that the Alien Tort Statute categorically bars claims for aiding and abetting alleged human rights violations, with several justices suggesting the viability of such claims should turn on the facts of each specific case. 

  • April 28, 2026

    Boston To Pay $850K In Settlement With 2020 Protesters

    Attorneys representing four protesters said Tuesday that the city of Boston has agreed to pay $850,000 to settle claims that police officers used excessive force on demonstrators protesting the killing of George Floyd in 2020.

  • April 28, 2026

    Makeup Ingredient Supplier Hits Ch. 11 Over Talc Torts

    Miyoshi America Inc., a supplier of cosmetics ingredients, filed for bankruptcy protection in Texas on Monday with a preapproved Chapter 11 plan aimed at putting to rest asbestos-related personal injury litigation with a $20 million trust.

  • April 28, 2026

    Purdue Pharma's $5.5B Plea Deal Clinched As Survivors Protest

    OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma LP has to pay a $3.5 billion fine and forfeit an additional $2 billion, more than five years after it pled guilty to criminal charges related to its role in the opioid crisis, a New Jersey federal judge said Tuesday.

  • April 28, 2026

    NFL Players Union Wants Out Of Ex-Raven's Grievance Suit

    The National Football League Players Association and its attorney have urged a Texas federal court to toss allegations that they delayed and then dropped a former linebacker's knee injury dispute with the Baltimore Ravens without consulting him, arguing the ex-player failed to adequately support his claims of the union's misconduct.

  • April 28, 2026

    MedMal Case Volume Declines, But Doctor Risks Remain High

    While the volume of malpractice lawsuits against U.S. physicians has dropped in recent years, that doesn't mean the threat of legal liability is dissipating, according to a report released Monday by the American Medical Association. 

  • April 28, 2026

    9th Circ. Finds Section 230 Blocks Meta Genocide Claims

    The Ninth Circuit on Tuesday affirmed the dismissal of claims by two women who allege that Facebook's algorithms contributed to their villages being attacked as part of the genocide of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar, saying that under circuit precedent, those claims are blocked by Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.

  • April 28, 2026

    Ga. Panel Seems Wary Of Nixing Sanction In Fatal Crash Case

    A Georgia appeals court panel seemed skeptical Tuesday of a company's challenge to a sanction stemming from lost evidence in a suit from the family of a pedestrian fatally struck by one of its drivers, with judges saying they couldn't know how important that evidence might have been.

  • April 28, 2026

    Mich. Panel Revives Consumers Energy Gas Blast Suit

    Michigan appellate judges have revived a negligence lawsuit against Consumers Energy over a house explosion that severely injured a Detroit-area man, finding factual disputes remain over whether the utility's gas line replacement work caused leaks that led to the blast. 

  • April 28, 2026

    Conn. Mom Drops Wine Tasting Crash Suit After $375K Offer

    The mother of a Connecticut restaurant worker who died in a drunken driving crash after an allegedly mandatory wine tasting event has dropped a lawsuit against an alcohol distributor and its employee, weeks after offering to settle for $375,000.

  • April 27, 2026

    Meta Seeks A Rally As Instagram Addiction Suit Losses Mount

    After a run of litigation losses, Meta Platforms Inc. will have to rethink its strategy in and out of court in an effort to beat back suits from coast to coast claiming that it is illegally hooking kids on Instagram, experts said, with everything from aggressive litigation to a global settlement on the table.

  • April 27, 2026

    TikTok Says Texas Trial Can't Happen 'Til October

    There is no world where discovery in Texas' lawsuit against TikTok can be completed in the next six weeks, the social media behemoth has told a Texas state court, saying that "it is now beyond doubt that the assumptions underlying the current scheduling order are wrong."

Expert Analysis

  • Improving Well-Being In Law, 10 Years After Landmark Study

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    An important 2016 study revealed significant substance abuse and mental health issues among lawyers, and while the findings helped normalize the conversation around these topics, a decade later, structural change is still needed, says Denise Robinson at PLI.

  • Managing Tort Risk After Justices' War Zone Immunity Ruling

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    The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision in Hencely v. Fluor changes the tort landscape for battlefield contractors, whose liability for employee injury will now turn on compliance with battlefield directives — a question that will require discovery into highly sensitive details of combat operations and military decision-making, says Warren Bianchi at Fluet.

  • What Mass. Ruling Clarifies About Whistleblower Protections

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    A Massachusetts appellate court's recent decision in Galvin v. Roxbury Community College, finding that an employee retained whistleblower protections despite his reporting responsibilities and possible contribution to the compliance failure, requires employers to distinguish between performance-based decisions and their response to protected reporting, say attorneys at Smith Kane.

  • AG Watch: Texas Charts A Course On Investigative Authority

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    The Texas Supreme Court's recent decision in Texas v. PFLAG affirmed, and arguably expanded, the Texas attorney general's civil investigative demand authority, providing a road map that other courts evaluating state attorney general CIDs may find instructive, amid a lack of precedent, say attorneys at Kelley Drye.

  • Reel Justice: 'No Other Choice' And Moral Rationalization

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    In the satirical thriller "No Other Choice," the main character rationalizes his decision to kill business competitors by creating a narrative of necessity, illustrating for attorneys the dangers of treating strategic litigation decisions as inevitabilities rather than choices, says Veronica Finkelstein at Wilmington University.

  • 5 Trial Lessons You Learn By Losing

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    Exploring insights that are usually gained only after trial loss can expose the gaps between what we intend to communicate and what lands with the fact-finder, including why being right isn't always a win and how winning a cross‑examination can help you lose your case, says Allison Rocker at Baker & McKenzie.

  • Series

    Officiating Football Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    Though they may seem to have little in common, officiating football has sharpened many of the same skills that define effective lawyering in management-side labor and employment: preparation, judgment, composure, credibility and ability to make difficult decisions in real time, says Josh Nadreau at Fisher Phillips.

  • Series

    Law School's Missed Lessons: How To Draft Pleadings

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    Most law school graduates step into their first jobs without ever having drafted a complaint, answer, motion or other type of pleading, but that gap can be closed by understanding the strategy embedded in every filing, writing with clarity and purpose, and seeking feedback at every step, says Eric Yakaitis at Haug Barron.

  • E-Discovery Quarterly: Recent Rulings On ESI Control

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    Several recent federal court decisions have perpetuated a split over what constitutes “control” of electronically stored information — with judges divided on whether the standard should turn on a party's legal right or practical ability to obtain the information, say attorneys at Sidley.

  • Insurer Lessons From 1st Wave Of GenAI Coverage Rulings

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    Several pending cases target the issue of whether generative AI may appropriately replace human professional decision-making, and though each case is still in discovery, the decisions thus far provide insurers with guidance on how courts may view these claims, say attorneys at Simpson Thacher.

  • The Role Of Operational Data In Tech Platform Liability Suits

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    As litigation becomes a de facto substitute for the regulation of major technology platforms, with plaintiffs advancing claims under product liability, public nuisance and consumer protection laws, among others, courts are evaluating how platform systems operate in practice based on large-scale operational data, say attorneys at Brattle.

  • 2 Discovery Rulings Break With Heppner On AI Privilege Issue

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    While a New York federal court’s recent ruling in U.S. v. Heppner suggests that some litigants’ communications with AI tools are discoverable, two other recent federal court decisions demonstrate that such interactions generally qualify for work-product protection under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, says Joshua Dunn at Brown Rudnick.

  • Opinion

    BNP Paribas Case Could Upend Global Banking Norms

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    If upheld on appeal, a New York federal jury's multimillion-dollar verdict against BNP Paribas would create an unpredictable liability landscape for global financial institutions in which fully lawful services in foreign countries can give rise to civil liability in U.S. courts, in a manner contrary to federal law, say attorneys at White & Case.

  • Series

    Isshin-Ryu Karate Makes Me A Better Lawyer

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    My involvement in martial arts, specifically Isshin-ryu, which has principles rooted in the eight codes of karate, has been one of the most foundational in the development of my personality, and particularly my approach to challenges — including in my practice of law, says Kaitlyn Stone at Barnes & Thornburg.

  • 5 Key Questions Attys Should Ask About Statistical Analyses

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    Even attorneys without a background in statistics can effectively vet the general concepts of a statistical analysis by asking targeted questions and can thereby reinforce the credibility and relevance of expert testimony — or expose its weaknesses, say Katrina Schydlower and Christopher Cunio at Hunton and Kevin Cahill at FTI Consulting.

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