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PENNSYLVANIA RECORD

Monday, September 23, 2024

News from 2012


Judge grants in part, denies in part motion to dismiss filed by Chester, Pa. police

By Jon Campisi |
A federal judge has granted in part, and denied in part a motion to dismiss filed by the City of Chester in a case in which a Chester woman sued three police officers for unlawfully beating and berating her.

DUI arrestee allegedly forced to urinate on self sues Phila. police

By Jon Campisi |
A Philadelphia woman who claims she was forced to urinate on herself after officers who arrested her for DUI refused to let her use the bathroom during booking has filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the City of Philadelphia and the individual officers involved in her arrest.

Veteran suburban Pa. schoolteacher files suit over disparate scrutiny, alleges retaliation over complaint

By Jon Campisi |
A suburban Philadelphia teacher who alleges she has been put under “improper and disparate scrutiny” because she filed a complaint against her employer with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has now filed a federal discrimination lawsuit against the school district where she has worked as an educator since the early 1980s.

Judge denies convicted bank robber's motion for a new trial

By Jon Campisi |
A man who was convicted in the June 21, 2010 robbery of the Citizen’s Bank branch at 6201 N. 5th St. in Philadelphia will not be entitled to a new trial, a federal judge in Philadelphia has ruled.

Product liability claim against penile implant manufacturer can proceed, judge rules

By Jon Campisi |
A federal judge in Philadelphia has allowed a strict liability claim over an alleged defective penile implant to proceed against the device’s manufacturer, while simultaneously dismissing a negligence claim against the company.

Judge grants partial class certification in case against courier service

By Jon Campisi |
A federal judge in Philadelphia has granted partial class certification for plaintiffs in a civil suit alleging the courier service they work or worked for improperly classified them as independent contractors and not employees.

City attorneys seek to transfer Phila. police abuse case to federal court

By Jon Campisi |
Attorneys for the City of Philadelphia have filed a Notice of Removal with the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania seeking to have a lawsuit filed by a man who alleges his civil rights were violated during a police encounter transferred from state court to federal court.

Fired Phila. Housing Authority worker files discrimination suit against agency

By Jon Campisi |
A former facilities manager at the Philadelphia Housing Authority who claims she was fired because of her gender has filed a federal discrimination complaint against the municipal housing agency.

Gun rights advocate accepts $25K settlement in Phila. 'open carry' case

By Jon Campisi |
The gun rights advocate who sued the City of Philadelphia and a handful of police officials for violating his civil rights during incidents in which officers allegedly harassed him for openly carrying his firearm has agreed to accept a cash settlement from the defendants.

Pa. lawmaker unveils judicial merit selection bills, seeks to move away from elected judiciary

By Jon Campisi |
When two Luzerne County judges were sent to prison last year for a combined total of nearly five decades stemming from their respective roles in a judicial scandal that came to be known as “Kids for Cash,” some observers lost their faith in Pennsylvania jurisprudence.

Walgreens attorneys seek to transfer medical malpractice suit to federal court

By Jon Campisi |
Lawyers for pharmaceutical retailer Walgreens have filed a removal notice at the U.S. District Court in Philadelphia seeking to remove a medical malpractice suit initiated by a Pennsylvania man who alleges he was given the wrong medication.

Fired door finisher sues former employer for retaliation and discrimination

By Jon Campisi |
A Philadelphia man who alleges he was fired from the job where he worked at for more than two-and-a-half years in retaliation for speaking out about discrimination at the workplace has filed a federal complaint against the city-based company.

Pa. constable charged with indecent assault for allegedly fondling female prisoner

By Jon Campisi |
A Pennsylvania constable stands accused of indecent assault stemming from an incident in which the man allegedly forced a female prisoner he was transporting to show him her bare chest.

Prosecutors file motion objecting to release of discovery materials in Penn State sex-abuse case

By Jon Campisi |
In court papers that were filed March 5, state prosecutors say they object to a defense request to review certain juvenile records belonging to the alleged victims in the Jerry Sandusky child sex-abuse case.

Texan's asbestos claim won't be heard in Philly

By John O'Brien |
A Texas couple won't be allowed to file its asbestos lawsuit in Philadelphia.

Retaliatory discharge complaint filed against laundry products company

By Jon Campisi |
A former delivery driver for a Philadelphia-based kitchen and laundry products company has filed a federal lawsuit against his former employer alleging he was fired in retaliation for requesting a medical leave of absence.

Controversial Philly narcotics cop named in civil rights complaint

By Jon Campisi |
A controversial Philadelphia narcotics officer was slapped with a civil complaint March 1 accusing him of falsely arresting a man who was believed to be a drug dealer, but who claims he was wrongly fingered by a confidential informant.

NY woman arrested in Phila. for drawing on sidewalk with chalk sues city, police officer

By Jon Campisi |
A woman who alleges she was wrongfully arrested by an overzealous Philadelphia police officer who detained her after she was discovered drawing on a sidewalk with chalk has filed a federal civil rights complaint against the city and the cop who arrested her.

Class action accuses Giant Foods of not being ADA compliant

By Jon Campisi |
A Pennsylvania woman who suffers from spina bifida has filed a class action lawsuit against Giant Food Stores LLC, alleging the supermarket retailer continues to violate the Americans with Disabilities Act by failing to either upgrade existing locations or making sure newly built Giant stores are ADA compliant.

Parole granted for ex-con who was acquitted in cop's murder, but has been jailed for two years

By Jon Campisi |
William J. Barnes, the 75-year-old ex-con who has been sitting in state prison for the past two years despite having been acquitted in the murder of a Philadelphia police officer whom Barnes shot and wounded in the 1960s, has been ordered released from custody.