A U.S. Labor Department investigation into alleged illegal tampering with correction workers’ payroll records unearthed disturbing news. Numerous complaints against the state, representing corrections workers, claimed that the workers were being swindled out of pay due to them. The impacted workers were cheated out of their fair payments due to... Read More »
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal has given Anthony Alexandre another chance to avoid deportation to Haiti, where he claims he would be tortured by voodoo priests because of his “anti-voodoo views.” In a 2-1 decision reported in a Memorandum Opinion, the appellate court reviewed Alexandre’s petition for review of... Read More »
New York State officials are continuing their investigation into suspected serial killer Rex Heuermann. This week, officials have released more details about evidence linking him to a series of murders along the Long Beach area. The thorough investigation came to a head after agents arrested Heuermann late last week near... Read More »
The United States Department of Justice charged four China-Based precursor chemical manufacturing firms and eight executives and employees in a global supply chain disruption including fentanyl. Three indictments in the Southern and Eastern Districts of New York were announced, charging the China-based companies and their employees with crimes related to... Read More »
Hollywood was well and truly brought to a standstill as the union representing around 160,000 actors declared a strike, joining the screenwriters who walked out in May. Both unions seek revised contracts and concessions from Hollywood's biggest studios in light of the streaming era, artificial intelligence, and other growing concerns... Read More »
Even though the COVID-19 pandemic is over, the legal issues that remain in its wake are far from finished. A California case released last week, which decided whose responsibility it is to pay the expenses for work that had to be performed at home, is another one. Paul Thai, an... Read More »
The victim of a deadly shooting at a Detroit Exxon Mobil is taking legal action against the gas station, the franchise owner, and the store clerk after his terrifying encounter. The $150 million lawsuit was filed on behalf of 37-year-old David Langston. Langston suffered multiple gunshot wounds in the hand... Read More »
Corby Kuciembas contracted a serious case of COVID-19 that caused her to be hospitalized where she was “kept alive on a respirator.” She claims she got the virus from her husband Robert, who also got COVID, and brought it home to her. Plaintiffs claimed the husband’s employer failed to take... Read More »
The battle over California’s gig worker law continues as the state supreme court has deigned to rule on the ultimate legality of Proposition 22. Prop 22 was a voter-passed initiative spurred on by Uber, Lyft, Doordash, and other companies that rely on so-called “gig workers” to fuel their business model.... Read More »
Class members have agreed to settle claims that a defect caused certain Hyundai and Kia vehicles to carry a risk of spontaneous combustion. According to the allegations, the covered vehicles were manufactured with defective anti-lock brake (ABS) modules. The modules were prone to short-circuit, which could cause the engine compartment... Read More »
The parents of a teen who was left permanently paralyzed after a boat crash have filed a lawsuit against the boat owners, accusing them of negligently hosting a party in which alcohol was both present and served to the minor partygoers. Boat owners George and Cecilia Pino hosted their daughter... Read More »
Three minority advocacy groups are taking legal action against Harvard University’s legacy and donor admission practices. The lawsuit was filed by lawyers associated with the Chica Project, the African Community Economic Development of New England, and the Greater Boston Latino Network and comes less than a week after the U.S.... Read More »
Many people no longer answer their phones since they assume, most often correctly, that there is a spam caller on the other end. It wasn’t supposed to be that way. The Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991 (TCPA) was signed into law by President George H.W. Bush to restrict automated... Read More »
A mechanical failure at a San Francisco fertility clinic caused plaintiffs to lose three embryos that they planned to use for in vitro fertilization. The couple, who hoped for a child, had purchased a homeowner’s insurance policy for the embryos. Their policy, however, would only reimburse them for “direct physical... Read More »
Last Friday, an Oklahoma judge has thrown out a lawsuit that sought reparations for victims and their families of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. The lawsuit is the latest blow in the push for reparations, but unlike all other cases, the plaintiffs seeking reparations are still alive. Viola Fletcher, 108,... Read More »