Charleston
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Charleston, PA 16901
Recent News About Charleston
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Eleven Bowles Rice attorneys from five of the firm’s offices – Charleston, Martinsburg, Morgantown and Parkersburg, West Virginia and Southpointe (Canonsburg), Pennsylvania – have been recognized as “Ones to Watch” in 2021 by The Best Lawyers in America®.
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HARRISBURG – Penn State University is now one of the many institutions of higher learning to be sued over its coronavirus closing.
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CHARLESTON, S.C. – A Philadelphia woman’s lawsuit against a number of corporations including 3M, and which contains claims that exposure to carcinogenic chemicals found in local drinking water led to her husband’s death, is now being heard in a South Carolina federal court as part of a multi-district litigation.
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The Delaware County Court of Common Pleas reported the following activity on Nov. 18 in the suits below:
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The Delaware County Court of Common Pleas reported the following activities in the suit brought by Tracey Mechanical, Inc. against The Boeing Company on Nov. 18.
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PHILADELPHIA — A North Carolina-based tire company is asking a federal court to dismiss it from a Bucks County man's personal injury lawsuit.
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Littler, the world’s largest employment and labor law practice representing management, is pleased to announce that Theodore “Ted” Schroeder has been elected as a fellow of the College of Labor and Employment Lawyers in the Class of 2019.
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Gordon Rees Scully Mansukhani is pleased to announce that 69 of its attorneys were listed in The Best Lawyers in America© 2019, four of whom received "Lawyer of the Year" honors.
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United States Attorney William M. McSwain announced that a second U.S. Postal carrier was sentenced to prison for taking bribes in exchange for delivering packages containing marijuana to drug dealers. Steven C. Williams, 43, of Philadelphia, was sentenced to 15 months’ imprisonment.
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PITTSBURGH — Two former employees have filed a class action lawsuit against MEC Construction LLC, of Mount Morris, citing alleged unpaid wages and violation of Workers' Compensation acts.
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The average number of companies targeted by some of the biggest asbestos firms in their lawsuits is in the triple-figures, according to recent statistics, leading some, especially those in claims management, to question the strategy of plaintiffs’ lawyers.