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PENNSYLVANIA RECORD

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Latest News


Chester looks to stay detective's racial discrimination case, due to municipal bankruptcy

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PHILADELPHIA – A Black corporal detective of Korean heritage alleges that the Chester Police Department engaged in racially discriminatory behavior towards him, which he says caused him to take leave from the department – but the City of Chester maintains that its pending bankruptcy should stay the case.

Parent of kindergartener allegedly sexually assaulted by classmate settle with Chester charter school

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PHILADELPHIA – The parent of a kindergartener who was allegedly sexually assaulted by a classmate on more than one occasion and who charged the charter school where the assaults took place with not preventing them from happening, has petitioned to settle their claims.

Jessica M. Rizzo Elected to the Board of Directors for the Wilma Theater

By Pennsylvania Record Report |
Montgomery McCracken is pleased to announce that associate Jessica M. Rizzo has been elected to the Board of Directors for Philadelphia’s Wilma Theater.

Troutman Pepper Advises Hamilton Lane in Closing of National and New York-Focused Small Business Credit Funds

By Southeast Texas Record Report |
Troutman Pepper client Hamilton Lane recently announced the final closing of Hamilton Lane National Small Business Credit Fund, L.P. and Hamilton Lane New York SBIC Fund II, L.P. (the Funds). Together, the Funds total $290 million in size*, with commitments from leading institutional investors across the United States.

Delaware County Court of Common Pleas: Actions Taken on Nov. 9, 2023

By Pennsylvania Record |
The Delaware County Court of Common Pleas reported the following activity on Nov. 9, 2023 in the suits below:

Woman sues school nurse who stabbed her on bus and was found not guilty for reason of insanity

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – After an altercation two years ago when a nurse/school bus aide stabbed a school employee in the back, the injured employee has filed a lawsuit against the nurse and her employer in an Allegheny County court, alleging that the company should have known the nurse was mentally ill and worked to prevent incidents like the one which transpired.

Black lifeguard claims he was discriminated against and fired from local YMCA facility

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PHILADELPHIA – A Black lifeguard alleges that he was discriminated against and wrongly fired by a Philadelphia-area YMCA facility for supposedly not participating in an emergency rescue situation – but he says that he in fact led the rescue effort, while the posted lifeguard, a Caucasian woman, was absent.

Judge consolidates class action suits over software company's alleged Exchange Act violations

By Nicholas Malfitano |
ALLENTOWN – A federal judge has consolidated a securities class action litigation, which claims that a software and payment processing company made materially false and misleading statements regarding its own business, operations and compliance policies.

Pittsburgh pub disavows responsibility for gun altercation which left plaintiff bystander shot

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – A Pittsburgh pub has denied responsibility for gunshot injuries sustained by a bystander to an exchange of gunfire between an unruly customer of the pub and its security force.

Legal news monitor continues to say Allegheny County court's access policies are questionable

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – A legal news organization which monitors court case filings has reiterated its claims that the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas’ “no-access-before-process” policy restricts the rights of both it and the public under the U.S. Constitution.

Tort expert warns business community about SCOTUS forum-shopping decision

By W.J. Kennedy |
Every company with even a minimal presence in more than one state should heed a June SCOTUS ruling, Mallory v. Norfolk S. Ry. Co., that exposes them to civil actions in states with “consent to jurisdiction statutes

Nelson Mullins Grows Pittsburgh Team with Addition of Partner Benjamin J. Sitter

By Pennsylvania Record Report |
Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP, a full service national law firm with offices from coast to coast, is pleased to announce that partner Benjamin J. Sitter is joining the firm’s Pittsburgh office.

Greenberg Traurig Philadelphia Increases Rankings on Annual ‘Best Law Firms’ Report

By Pennsylvania Record Report |
Eleven of global law firm Greenberg Traurig, LLP’s Philadelphia practices were ranked in the 2024 U.S. News – Best Lawyers “Best Law Firms” report – an increase from last year.

Delaware County Court of Common Pleas: Actions Taken on Nov. 8, 2023

By Pennsylvania Record |
The Delaware County Court of Common Pleas reported the following activity on Nov. 8, 2023 in the suits below:

Somerset County wants dismissal from suit detailing abuse by its former District Attorney

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – Somerset County has motioned for dismissal from a lawsuit brought by a woman who claimed that its ex-District Attorney Jeffrey Thomas sent her sexually violent text messages for months before breaking into her home and physically and sexually assaulting her, allegations that resulted in Thomas being sent to prison in August for multiple years.

Casino customer injured by fellow patron continues to say casino's liability denials are meritless

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – An Allegheny County man insists that he suffered a long list of injuries when an intoxicated fellow patron of Rivers Casino drunkenly fell on his right leg, and has refuted the casino’s attempts at rejecting liability for the events in question.

Nonprofit group and parents want to overturn COVID-19 vax regulation for minors in Philadelphia

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PHILADELPHIA – A California nonprofit group chaired by independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is suing the City of Philadelphia and its health officials, over an emergency regulation enacted during the COVID-19 pandemic which permitted children as young as 11 years old to be vaccinated without parental consent.

Borough of Donora and former police superintendent opt to stay case, move towards resolution

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – Litigation between the Borough of Donora and its longtime Superintendent of Police has been stayed, pending the completion of mediation that the parties anticipate will end with the resolution of the case.

New Kensington pub says shooter in fatal incident should be named as defendant

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – A New Kensington pub has charged that litigation brought by the mother of a man killed in a shooting at the establishment is incomplete, due to the shooter not being named as a defendant in the action.

Reed Smith strengthens private equity and M&A practice with addition of partner Daniel Connelly

By Pennsylvania Record Report |
Global law firm Reed Smith announced that Daniel Connelly has joined the firm as a partner in its Global Corporate Group, based in Philadelphia.