Pennsylvania

  • January 26, 2024

    Monsanto Hit With $2.25B Verdict In Philly Roundup Trial

    A Philadelphia jury on Friday hit the makers of weedkiller Roundup with an astronomical $2 billion punitive damages verdict, along with $250 million in compensatory damages, in a case brought by a Pennsylvania man who claimed Monsanto failed to warn users that the product contained carcinogenic chemicals and contributed to his development of cancer.

  • January 26, 2024

    Schools, Towns Can't Show Feasible Alternative, Turf Co. Says

    A synthetic turf maker asked a New Jersey federal judge on Thursday to toss claims that its fields are defective, arguing the plaintiffs have failed to show that any feasible alternative existed at the time they purchased their fields.

  • January 26, 2024

    Ex-Allied World Exec Denies Feds' $1.5M Fraud Charges

    A former vice president at Allied World National Insurance Co. who was recently ordered to pay $2.9 million to the company in its civil case accusing him of embezzlement has pled not guilty to federal prosecutors' 10 wire fraud charges against him in his parallel criminal proceedings.

  • January 25, 2024

    Philly Children's Hospital Avoids Baby Brain Injury Suit

    A $7 million medical malpractice settlement for claims that an Ohio doctor's operation injured an unborn child precluded a separate lawsuit claiming that Children's Hospital of Philadelphia caused the same injuries by not treating the same issue, a Pennsylvania appellate court ruled Thursday.

  • January 25, 2024

    Car Loan Borrowers Seek Final OK For $82M Wells Fargo Deal

    Pennsylvania auto loan borrowers have asked a federal judge to approve a more than $80 million class action settlement resolving wrongful repossession claims against Wells Fargo, saying the deal will provide more than $15 million to borrowers and forgive nearly $67 million in disputed auto loan deficiency balances.

  • January 25, 2024

    Aon, Ex-Partner Cut $1.5M SEC Deal Over Return Errors

    Chicago-based registered investment adviser Aon Investments USA Inc. and the firm's former partner have agreed to pay a total of $1.57 million to resolve U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission allegations that they repeatedly misled a pension fund client about a discrepancy in its investment returns, according to a pair of orders by the agency Thursday.

  • January 25, 2024

    Real Estate Rumors: Maryland U., Cohen & Steers, Marriott

    Maryland University of Integrative Health is said to have sold 12.5 acres of land and a two-story building for $8.3 million, a venture of Cohen & Steers and the Sterling Organization has reportedly bought a Texas shopping center for $42 million, and a Marriott hotel in Philadelphia is believed to have traded hands for $32.7 million.

  • January 25, 2024

    Philly Cheesesteak Shop Owners Get Prison For Tax Evasion

    The father-son duo behind the famous Tony Luke's cheesesteak restaurant in South Philadelphia were each sentenced to 20 months in prison Thursday for what prosecutors said was a decadelong tax evasion scheme that included keeping false ledgers and paying employees under the table.

  • January 25, 2024

    Philly Hospital Must Face Ex-Engineer's COVID Vax Bias Suit

    The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia can't escape a former engineer's lawsuit claiming it unlawfully refused his request for a religious exemption from a COVID-19 vaccine mandate, after a Pennsylvania federal judge ruled Thursday that the worker provided enough detail about his Christian beliefs.

  • January 25, 2024

    Pa. Atty Suspended For Conduct In Cat Food Case

    A Philadelphia-area attorney has been suspended from practicing law for a year and a day, after the state's disciplinary board concluded he repeatedly and publicly misrepresented facts in a case against J.M. Smucker Co. over a cat food recall, and in three other cases as well.

  • January 25, 2024

    Surgeon Says He Was Alone On-Call But Couldn't Hit Quotas

    A surgeon at a small Pennsylvania hospital testified Thursday that he covered weeks and months of "on-call" time by himself after his colleague's sudden retirement in 2019, but he still couldn't meet high productivity quotas that an Allegheny Health Network subsidiary eventually cited to cut his salary and push him out the door.

  • January 24, 2024

    5 Universities Cut $104.5M Deal In Student Aid-Fixing Suit

    A group of students is asking an Illinois federal judge to sign off on a $104.5 million deal with five universities in a proposed antitrust class action claiming that 17 universities conspired to limit student aid.

  • January 24, 2024

    Bid To Swap Chevron For An Old Standby Raises Doubts

    Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court debated whether a World War II-era doctrine encouraging courts to strongly consider agency statutory interpretations could replace the court's controversial so-called Chevron doctrine that requires judges to defer to those interpretations if a statute is ambiguous.

  • January 24, 2024

    Software Co. Says Data Breach Victims Aren't Customers

    NextGen Healthcare is asking a Georgia federal court to dismiss a proposed consolidated class action because the plaintiffs don't have a relationship with the software company that would make it liable for damages, even as it acknowledged their health information was compromised by a cyberattack. 

  • January 24, 2024

    NJ Courts Can't Hear Philly Clergy Abuse Claims, Panel Says

    A New Jersey appellate panel on Wednesday affirmed the dismissal of three priest sex abuse lawsuits against the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, ruling that the Garden State does not have jurisdiction over the archdiocese in the cases.

  • January 24, 2024

    Samsung, Best Buy Owe Insurer In Microwave Fire, Court Told

    Samsung and Best Buy should reimburse State Farm for a $231,000 payment covering damage to a home in a fire that State Farm claims was caused by a defective microwave, the insurer alleged in a complaint removed to Pennsylvania federal court.

  • January 24, 2024

    Former Judge Andrew F. Szefi Joins Knox Law's ADR Practice

    A former Allegheny County judge will continue to preside over civil disputes as a mediator after recently joining Knox McLaughlin Gornall & Sennett P.C.'s Pittsburgh office.

  • January 24, 2024

    Pa. Debt Relief Firms Settle AG's Deception Claims

    A pair of law firms advertising debt settlement services will pay a total of at least $75,000 to their former clients as part of a settlement with the Pennsylvania Attorney General's Office to end allegations of deceptive advertising and telemarketing, the office announced Wednesday.

  • January 24, 2024

    Black Nurse Aide Can't Press Race Bias Suit, 3rd Circ. Says

    The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia won't have to face a race bias suit from a former nursing aide, the Third Circuit ruled, concluding that she failed to show that she was fired because she's Black and not because of the dozen disciplinary warnings she'd received.

  • January 23, 2024

    3 Generic-Drug Cos. Reach Settlements In Price-Fixing MDL

    Generic-drug makers Apotex Corp., Heritage Pharmaceuticals Ltd. and Breckenridge Pharmaceutical Inc. have each agreed to shell out a combined $45 million to settle allegations they colluded to fix the prices of many medications, according to a trio of motions filed Tuesday in multidistrict litigation in Pennsylvania federal court.

  • January 23, 2024

    $57M Morocco Hotel Award Can't Be Enforced, 3rd Circ. Hears

    An investment firm urged the Third Circuit on Monday not to force it to pay a $57 million arbitral award issued against its former subsidiary following a dispute over a mismanaged luxury hotel, saying the suit is an act of desperation by a hotel owner with nowhere else to turn.

  • January 23, 2024

    UPenn's Retrial Bid Is Denied In $183M Birth Injury Case

    A Philadelphia judge said Tuesday that she won't grant a new trial to the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania after it was hit with a $183 million medical malpractice verdict, saying the jury rightfully found that the healthcare professionals didn't act correctly and that the hospital is liable.

  • January 23, 2024

    Philly Roundup Judge Locks Horns With Attys Over Witness

    Philadelphia's Roundup trial lived up to the product's name Tuesday as the judge tried to wrangle runaway questioning and hair-trigger attorneys, with Monsanto's witness finding himself the center of attention.

  • January 23, 2024

    College Wants 9th Circ. Opinion In $1.5M Fraud Coverage Spat

    A for-profit college that settled with the U.S. government after being accused of stealing money meant to fund veterans' education asked the Ninth Circuit to weigh in after a California federal court said its insurer didn't have to cover nearly $1.5 million in connected investigation defense costs.

  • January 23, 2024

    ​​​​​​​'Two-Step' Bankruptcies Abuse Law, AGs Tell Justices

    Attorneys general from 24 states and the District of Columbia told the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday that divisional mergers that manufacture jurisdiction for bankruptcy purposes shouldn't be allowed, writing in an amicus brief that Georgia-Pacific asbestos unit Bestwall employed the tactic to shield the parent from liability.

Expert Analysis

  • The Important Role Of Contra Proferentem In ERISA Cases

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    A Pennsylvania federal court's recent decision in Stein v. Paul Revere Life Insurance illustrates what happens when ERISA plan terms are unclear, and why the contra proferentem principle should be applied uniformly in all ERISA cases, says Mark DeBofsky at DeBofsky Law.

  • Defamation Alternatives For Suing Hoax Social Media Users

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    A recent proliferation of false or hoax social media content has targeted public figures and corporate accounts, and for plaintiffs seeking redress there are three types of claims that may be less-risky alternatives to defamation and libel litigation, say Charles Schafer and Ross Kloeber at Sidley.

  • Practical Skills Young Attorneys Must Master To Be Happier

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    For young lawyers, finding happiness on the job — with its competitive nature and high expectations for billable hours — is complicated, but three skills can help them gain confidence, reduce stress and demonstrate their professional value in ways they never imagined, says career counselor Susan Smith Blakely.

  • 4 Ways State Oversight May Change Nationwide Health Deals

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    With California soon to become the most recent state to increase its oversight of health care mergers, acquisitions and investments, attorneys should consider how these updated state regulations may increase the costs, timelines and disclosure requirements for national deals, say John Saran and Jaclyn Freshman at Ropes & Gray.

  • Pennsylvania Is Gathering Momentum On Adult-Use Cannabis

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    Though Pennsylvania has been relatively slow-moving on cannabis reform, recent support from state leaders and pressure from neighboring states signal that legalization efforts are picking up steam, and could lead to the enactment of adult-use legislation soon, says Devin Malone at Clark Hill.

  • Pending NCAA Ruling Could Spell Change For Unpaid Interns

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    The Third Circuit's upcoming Johnson v. NCAA decision, over whether student-athletes can be considered university employees, could reverberate beyond college sports and force employers with unpaid student interns to add these workers to their payrolls, say Babak Yousefzadeh and Skyler Hicks at Sheppard Mullin.

  • ABA Opinion Should Help Clarify Which Ethics Rules Apply

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    A recent American Bar Association opinion provides key guidance on interpreting ABA Model Rule 8.5's notoriously complex choice-of-law analysis — and should help lawyers authorized to practice in multiple jurisdictions determine which jurisdiction's ethics rules govern their conduct, say attorneys at HWG.

  • 4 Ways To Reboot Your Firm's Stalled Diversity Program

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    Law firms that have failed to see real progress despite years of diversity initiatives can move forward by committing to tackle four often-taboo obstacles that hinder diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, says Steph Maher at Jaffe.

  • Using ChatGPT To Handle Insurance Claims Is A Risky Move

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    ChatGPT gets some insurance law questions surprisingly wrong, and while it handles broader coverage concepts significantly better, using it to assist with coverage questions will likely lead to erroneous results and could leave insurers liable for bad faith, says Randy Maniloff at White and Williams.

  • States Shouldn't Fear HIPAA When Improving Gov't Services

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    As the looming end of the COVID-19 public health emergency motivates states to streamline their processes for individuals seeking public benefits, they should generally not have to worry about violating the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act when sharing data across government services, says Jodi Daniel at Crowell & Moring.

  • DOJ's Google Sanctions Motion Shows Risks Of Auto-Deletion

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    The U.S. Department of Justice recently hit Google with a sanctions motion over its alleged failure to preserve relevant instant-messaging communications, a predicament that should be a wake-up call for counsel concerning the danger associated with automatic-deletion features and how it's been handled by the courts, say Oscar Shine and Emma Ashe at Selendy Gay.

  • What To Expect From A Litigation Finance Industry Recession

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    There's little data on how litigation finance would fare in a recession, but a look at stakeholders' incentives suggests corporate demand for litigation finance would increase in a recessionary environment, while the number of funders could shrink, says Matthew Oxman at LexShares.

  • J&J Unit Ch. 11 Case Shows Texas 2-Step May Be Wrong Move

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    The Third Circuit's recent ruling in the Chapter 11 case of Johnson & Johnson's talc-related damages unit raises new questions about the viability of divisional merger transactions as a means to manage mass tort liabilities through bankruptcy, especially when there is a robust funding arrangement, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.

  • Justices' MoneyGram Opinion Could Spur State Legislation

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    The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision that federal law governs the escheatment of over $250 million in unclaimed MoneyGram checks provides clarity for some issuers, but aspects of related common law remain uncertain and states may take the opportunity to pass multistate escheatment legislation, say attorneys at Alston & Bird.

  • Justices Leave Questions Open On Dual-Purpose Atty Advice

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's recent dismissal of In re: Grand Jury on grounds that certiorari was improvidently granted leaves unresolved a circuit split over the proper test for deciding when attorney-client privilege protects a lawyer's advice that has multiple purposes, say Susan Combs and Richard Kiely at Holland & Hart.

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