A woman who fell on uneven pavement in a Costco parking lot can’t revive her negligence suit against the wholesale warehouse club, a state appeal panel ruled.
https://t.co/Og9BrRpyEu
The 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals fined a Chicago immigration lawyer $5,000 for submitting a brief containing hallucinations generated by artificial intelligence.https://t.co/wzsjbN8Ljs
“The opinion reflects the continued narrowing of jurisdictional reach, particularly in an era of remote contracting,” writes @DonaldEckler in today’s For the Defense column.
https://t.co/zz27w2TJsb
A progressive trailblazing attorney and former Cook County Circuit Court judge, Carole Kamin Bellows opened doors that had long been closed to women.https://t.co/tDVMYOVI4M
Two @united pilots cannot sue the Chicago-based airline for religious discrimination over its COVID-19 vaccine policy because they introduced the claims nearly two years after litigation started, causing an “undue delay,” a federal appeals court held.https://t.co/Tw6Dp9cIPa
People News: @MorganLewisLaw brought back Sarah L. Engle as a partner in its employee benefits and executive compensation group. https://t.co/pPCOHvtQtX
The Coast Guard Auxiliary did not trample on the First Amendment by kicking out a member who made offensive remarks on LinkedIn about Girl Scouts, U.S. Supreme Court justices and a university official stricken with cancer, a federal appeals court held.
https://t.co/wfVDvrFVwD
A dispatcher must face claims related to providing information to two Carroll County Sheriff’s Office employees that enabled them to drive while intoxicated, resulting in a teenager’s death, a federal judge ruled.
https://t.co/TahQa53ymi
The judge “addressed Conant’s two main arguments pertaining to suit limitations provisions: waiver and estoppel,” writes Don Sampen in today’s Insurance Matters column.
https://t.co/WuBatO0WFL
People News: @AronbergG hired Michael Lee Tinaglia as a member of its appellate litigation, banking, finance, business litigation and employment law practice groups. https://t.co/LirsnSRvnb
A federal judge threw out a former student’s lawsuit alleging City Colleges of Chicago violated his rights during an investigation into stalking and sexual harassment accusations that ended with him being suspended from school.https://t.co/d9gyOtywjn
“At some point, courts are left asking a difficult but unavoidable question: When must judges stop pretending not to see what is plainly in front of them?” writes @SCOTUSBios in today’s column about racism.https://t.co/w0QvRg08xz