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PENNSYLVANIA RECORD

Monday, September 30, 2024

Latest News


Troutman Pepper Names Joseph Imperiale Managing Partner in Philadelphia

By The Penn Record |
Joseph T. Imperiale, a partner in Troutman Pepper’s Construction practice, has been appointed to office managing partner in Philadelphia, effective January 1, 2024. Imperiale succeeds Partner Michael H. Friedman.

Privacy: What to Expect in 2024 on January 8

By The Penn Record |
The hottest privacy topics for 2024 and why they will be important/impactful.

Acting Labor Secretary Su tries to keep company from selling health care facilities, ahead of trial on violations

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – The damages phase of an employee compensation case pitting acting U.S. Secretary of Labor Julie Su against more than a dozen health care operating companies, defendants which she is attempting to prevent from selling some of their care facilities, is slated for trial in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania next Monday.

Lancaster County law enforcement seeks judgment on the pleadings for raids of vape products shops

By Nicholas Malfitano |
ALLENTOWN – Lancaster County, its district attorney and police officers are seeking judgment on the pleadings in litigation asserting that they conducted warrantless raids of businesses selling vape products last April, raids which those proprietors contend were illegal and contradictory to state laws currently on the books.

Delco woman who claimed she fell into hole at Fernwood Cemetery while attending funeral ends case

By Nicholas Malfitano |
MEDIA – A Delaware County woman who alleged that Fernwood Cemetery was negligent in the operation of its funerary grounds, the result of which was her falling into a deep hole at the cemetery, has resolved her claims.

Colorado man who said his Pa. property was demolished without him knowing, appeals to Third Circuit

By Nicholas Malfitano |
SCRANTON – A Colorado man who contended that a piece of mixed-use property he owned in Pittston was illegally demolished without the responsible authorities serving him notice, and who lost his case in federal court, has appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.

Lawsuit blames Pittsburgh schools for attack at Brashear High

By Pennsylvania Record |
PITTSBURGH - A Brashear High student who says he was bullied, including an attack that led to a traumatic injury, has sued the Pittsburgh Public School District.

Lycoming County sued over death of diabetic inmate

By Pennsylvania Record |
WILLIAMSPORT - A federal wrongful death lawsuit says staff at Lycoming County's prison allowed a man's diabetic condition to worsen until he died in custody.

Pittsburgh Steelers season ticket holder says she was wrongfully accused of using a racial slur

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – A Pittsburgh Steelers season ticket holder alleges she was treated rudely by stadium personnel and then defamed by being wrongly accused of using a racial slur towards another stadium employee working during the game.

Lawsuit: Philly sheriff's officers stormed couple's home looking for their son, who had been murdered months before

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PHILADELPHIA – A pair of parent plaintiffs claim multiple officers from the Philadelphia Sheriff’s Department violated their civil rights, when the officers executed a search warrant at their home in an attempt to find the plaintiffs’ son, despite his having been murdered five months before the search took place.

Equipment operator who said PennDOT didn't accommodate his disability and fired him drops one defendant

By Nicholas Malfitano |
SCRANTON – A transportation equipment operator who insisted that the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation failed to accommodate his disability and later fired him for alleged comments he made in a Facebook post has voluntarily dismissed one defendant from claims made under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and the Pennsylvania Human Relations Act.

Attorney who alleged other counsel stole his work product and refused to return it now fights sanctions

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – A Western Pennsylvania attorney who alleged that proprietary information from his law firm is in the possession of other counsel and that those defendants have refused to return his information to him, is now fighting sanctions levied against him by the defendants.

Uber seeks to move case surrounding murder of driver to arbitration, rather than court

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – Uber has argued that wrongful death litigation brought by a Pennsylvania woman concerning the murder of her daughter, a driver for the ride share service who was held up at gunpoint and killed by her passenger, should be resolved in arbitration and not in a court of law.

Delco man claims after beating tickets, the officer who wrote them later arrested him on false charges

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PHILADELPHIA – A Delaware County man alleges that a member of the Colwyn Police Department, after unsuccessfully attempting to sanction him with a trio of motor vehicle tickets, later arrested him on fabricated charges of marijuana possession and disorderly conduct, which were then withdrawn at the plaintiff’s first preliminary court hearing.

Judge will allow some child statements in suit over first-graders taught transgender issues

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – A federal judge has clarified the admissibility of child statements made to parents suing the Mount Lebanon School District, in a lawsuit which alleged their civil rights were violated when the district provided classroom instruction to their first-grade children on the topics of gender dysphoria and transgender transitioning.

Sesame Place Philadelphia wants judgment in lawsuit alleging discrimination against Black children

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PHILADELPHIA – SeaWorld’s Sesame Place Philadelphia is seeking a dismissal through summary judgment, in litigation which charged that employees of the park discriminated against the plaintiff’s daughter, a Black child, during a meet-and-greet session with some costumed characters.

Home inspection group avails itself of liability for property buyers' mold exposure injuries

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – A home inspection company has refuted claims liability that it was responsible for mold exposure injuries that a pair of New Kensington home buyers sustained, after they purchased the property in question from their co-defendants.

Marple Township seeks dismissal of case brought after man killed by passing vehicle

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PHILADELPHIA – Marple Township and several of its police officers look to dismiss unnecessary and unserved parties and what it calls improper relief, in civil rights litigation brought by the estate of a man left at a bus stop while in an intoxicated state by Township police officers, and who was then killed by a passing vehicle shortly thereafter two years ago.

Community Involvement Spotlight: Lee Piatt and NEPIRC

By The Penn Record |
Community Involvement Spotlight, we recognize Lee Piatt’s work with the Northeastern Pennsylvania Industrial Resource Center (NEPIRC).

Philly police officers say civil rights claims of plaintiffs whose home they searched for former occupant are invalid

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PHILADELPHIA – Counsel for the Philadelphia Police Department have rejected allegations that officers violated a pair of homeowners’ civil rights during an arrest warrant-related search for the former occupant of their home, referring to them as insufficient.