After a six-month trail, a six-member jury in New York found Teva Pharmaceuticals, based in Israel, and numerous subsidiary firms, liable for New York state's drug epidemic. This landmark case deemed Teva Pharmaceuticals is responsible for New York state's severe opioid crisis, connecting the dots from manufacturing to sales to... Read More »
Five days after he was released from prison, a schizophrenic man was arrested for attempted rape with an enhancement for inflicting bodily injury. He waived a jury trial, pleaded guilty, and was sentenced to six years in prison. Committed to a state mental hospital for treatment before commencing his prison... Read More »
After a weeklong standoff, Chicago Public Schools resumed in-person learning after a proposal was approved by the Chicago Teachers Union’s House of Delegates. The Chicago Teachers Union tweeted Monday night, "The Chicago Teachers Union House of Delegates has voted tonight to suspend the Union's remote work action while rank-and-file membership... Read More »
New York Real Estate Scion and convicted killer, Robert Durst, has passed away at age 78 while under the custody of California’s Department of Corrections. Durst’s death was announced by his lawyer Chip Lewis who shared, "We understand that his death was due to natural causes associated with the litany... Read More »
The state of Illinois has hit another roadblock in its goal to end a federal immigration detention program this week. Illinois would become the sixth in the nation to limit contracts between county and city jails with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to house immigrant detainees. Governor J.B. Pritzker... Read More »
Cyber Ninjas, a Florida firm hired by the Arizona State Senate to review presidential election results in Maricopa County after former Donald Trump claimed the election had been stolen from him, was fined by Judge John Hannah $50,000 a day last week for contempt. The company, which has been criticized... Read More »
A jury of four women and eight men deliberated for more than fifty hours and returned with a unanimous guilty verdict convicting Elizabeth Holmes, 37, founder of biotech company Theranos, of three counts of wire fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. In total, she had been... Read More »
Last week, Louisiana’s Gov. John Bel Edwards granted a posthumous pardon to Homer Plessy in what has been described as an effort to correct a historic injustice, 130 years overdue. Plessy was the man behind the landmark Supreme Court case, Plessy v. Ferguson. In 1896, the Supreme Court decided in... Read More »
The family of a Texas teen who was brutally attacked by his classmates is suing those classmates and their parents in a $50 million lawsuit. Sixteen-year-old football star Cole Hagan was brutally attacked at a house party in Lake Jackson, Texas, during the late evening hours of December 3rd last... Read More »
In a lawsuit filed against a small southeastern Virginia town, Attorney General Mark Herring alleges that the police department of Windsor, VA operated in a manner that led to the discriminatory treatment of African Americans. The lawsuit stems from a December 2020 traffic stop which involved Windsor police officers and... Read More »
In a battle about the legal meaning of a key phrase in the governing statute, the California Supreme Court determined that a non-profit corporation was liable for over $12 million in costs caused by one of its employees who negligently ignited a fire that destroyed almost 7,500 acres of land... Read More »
Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, each state has enacted its own unique laws on vaccines and testing requirements to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. While the Supreme Court has ruled in the past on two paramount cases that give the state the power to enforce vaccine mandates, it doesn’t create an... Read More »
Despite the fact that COVID-19 cases increased by more than 40% in the week between Christmas and New Year’s Eve, legal challenges to the Biden Administration’s “vaccine or test” mandates for large employers and health care workers are mounting. The Supreme Court has now agreed to hear oral arguments on... Read More »
A drunk driving suspect who caused a fatal accident was given a warrantless search of his blood after being taken by helicopter to a hospital. On his way to surgery, police asked for and received the sample. During his trial for second-degree murder and gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated, he... Read More »
Medical groups including the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP), and the American College of Radiology (ACR) have brought forward a lawsuit against several government agencies over the implementation of the No Surprise Billing Act. The lawsuit was filed in the federal district court... Read More »