A California man has been indicted on charges stemming from fraudulent loan applications seeking at least $27 million from the nation's coronavirus relief program, the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP). Robert Benlevi, 53, of Encino, California, has been charged with falsely submitting 27 loan applications to four different banks in order... Read More »
The 12-year-old shooter at a South Carolina middle school has been arrested and charged with the murder of another 12-year-old student. The Greenville County Sheriff's office confirmed last Friday to the local news outlet, Greenville News, that the 12-year-old victim, Jamari Cortez Bonaparte Jackson, died as a result of gunshot... Read More »
Florida’s controversial "Parental Rights in Education" bill has caused an uproar within the state and throughout the nation. Parents with school-age children, particularly children who identify as gay or transgender, have been vocal about the harm they believe the bill could cause, with a major concern being the potential bullying,... Read More »
Writing that the right to vote in Florida is “under siege,” a federal judge struck parts of the state’s “unconstitutional” and “suppressive” new voting law. In addition, he took the rare step of ordering mandatory pre-clearance, an “extraordinary oversight” that will be required for new Florida laws that seek to... Read More »
A now-retired Pennsylvania trooper was awarded $2 million after a Philadelphia jury found his claims of forced retirement by his employer, the state police, to be substantial. Robert Newton was a Pennsylvania state trooper when he filed a federal lawsuit in December 2018 against the state police department. In his... Read More »
The federal Juvenile Delinquency Act (JDA) of 1974 aims to prevent future criminal behavior by minor offenders. One young man, who was first arrested for gang crimes when he was a minor, tried to argue that he is still entitled to JDA treatment after he turned 18. The Ninth Circuit... Read More »
An investigation into Missouri-based nonprofit charity Preferred Family Healthcare has resulted in the forfeiture of over $8 million to the federal government and the state of Arkansas. Preferred Family Healthcare was the nation's largest Medicaid-funded charity providing services to the public including counseling, treatment for mental health and substance abuse,... Read More »
He was late to court. He claimed he was the father of a newborn who got stuck in Los Angeles traffic. The judge, who was unmoved by the burglary defendant’s excuses, disregarded his plea agreement and sent him to prison. But a California appeal court found his excuses acceptable and... Read More »
Jurors have awarded protesters in the 2020 demonstrations against the death of Minneapolis man, George Floyd, a total of $14 million. The death of Floyd in the summer of 2020 sparked a national outcry for police reform across the nation. In many cities, demonstrators came out to peacefully protest police... Read More »
In early March, the Department of Homeland Security announced that it would designate Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Ukrainians living in the United States. This latest initiative to help nationals of the war-torn country will impact an estimated 30,000 Ukrainians who are currently living in the United States under a... Read More »
Vapes and e-cigarettes. They come in lots of kid-friendly flavors like Blue Razz, Pegasus Milk and Menthol Freeze. They hide the dangers of tobacco while they poison the brains of teens. Los Angeles County is one of over a hundred California localities to ban their sale. Big Tobacco fought the... Read More »
Several California hospitals recently filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (Department) alleging undercalculation of disproportionate share hospital (DSH) payments. DSH is a federal program that provides additional funding to hospitals that treat more low-income patients than the average hospital. The California lawsuit is the... Read More »
The mother of a nine-year-old boy has filed a lawsuit in Multnomah County Circuit Court after a school worker allegedly threw the child across an empty room. Tiria Jones’s autistic son was just days into the new school year at Four Creeks School when an altercation with one of the... Read More »
In January 2020, a 57-year-old former AT&T employee filed a putative class action alleging that the telecommunications giant engaged in a pattern and practice of age discrimination. The outcome of the case so far provides a case study on how corporations that rely too heavily on anti-litigation agreements can accidentally... Read More »
Perhaps inspired by the old proverb that advises, “If you throw enough mud at a wall, some of it will stick,” Donald Trump has sued Hillary Clinton and scores of others for “orchestrating an unthinkable plot” that “shocks the conscience and is an affront to the nation’s democracy.” All these... Read More »