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PENNSYLVANIA RECORD

Monday, July 8, 2024

Latest News


Medical malpractice lawsuit filed after death of 84-year-old man at Geisinger Clinic

By Pennsylvania Record |
WILLIAMSPORT - The estate of a man who died at 84 years old blames his treatment at Geisinger Clinic.

Lowe's faces lawsuit over allegedly faulty ladder

By Pennsylvania Record |
PITTSBURGH - An Indiana County man says he bought a defective ladder at Lowe's that broke while he was washing his car.

Woman injured during treadmill stress test says doctors shouldn't be dismissed from suit

By Nicholas Malfitano |
WILLIAMSPORT – A woman running on a treadmill for a medically administered stress test has reiterated her claims that doctors ignored her warnings that the speed of the treadmill was too fast for her to keep up – leading her to fall and suffer a broken arm and other injuries, and has rejected two doctors’ attempt to be dismissed from the case.

Alabama paper supply company seeking dismissal of postal worker’s chemical burn injury suit

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – An Alabama paper supply company is seeking to dismiss litigation which alleged the plaintiff suffered third-degree chemical burns when a drain cleaner product being sent through the mail leaked through its thin packaging and made contact with her body.

Professor Brooks Appointed to Council for the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

By The Penn Record |
Professor Susan L. Brooks, acting director of the Andy and Gwen Stern Community Lawyering Clinic, has been appointed to serve a three-year term as one of two social scientists on the National Advisory Child Health and Human Development (NACHHD) Council for the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD).

Troutman Pepper Advises Award-Winning Creative Agency Red Tettemer O’Connell + Partners in Sale to Mod Op

By The Penn Record |
Troutman Pepper client Red Tettemer O’Connell + Partners (RTO+P), an award-winning, Philadelphia-based creative agency, has been acquired by Mod Op, a full-service digital marketing agency accelerating customer growth through human creativity and automation.

Transactional Finance Volume Up Significantly in Fast Start to 2024

By The Penn Record |
Ballard Spahr’s national Finance Department is off to a busy start to the year, with closed-deal volume pushing past $6 billion, well ahead of 2023’s pace as the end of Q1 2024 approaches.

Capital Markets 101 Lunch Talk with Simpson Thacher on April 2, 2024

By The Penn Record |
Penn Carey Law Capital Markets Association is excited to invite you to join our Capital Markets 101 lunch talk with Simpson Thacher attorneys.

Azura sued over data breach

By Pennsylvania Record |
PHILADELPHIA - A federal class action lawsuit targets Azura over a recent data breach.

National Parks Service, Philadelphia sued over fall on Ghost Tour

By Pennsylvania Record |
PHILADELPHIA - A man who hurt his left shoulder on a fall during a Philadelphia Ghost Tour has sued both the city and the National Parks Service.

Leet Township objects to ex-police chief's breach of contract suit, says he was “at-will employee”

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – Leet Township has objected to a lawsuit brought by its former chief of police – who alleged he was fired four years before his contract expired and is now seeking financial remuneration – and countered that he was instead an at-will public employee, who could be dismissed at any time.

Lehigh Township and its Chief of Police settle former officer's claims of sexual harassment for $1.75M

By Nicholas Malfitano |
ALLENTOWN – Lehigh Township and its Chief of Police have settled litigation from a female former officer of the Lehigh Township Police Department for $1.75 million – litigation which alleged that, over a five-year period, the Chief of Police targeted her for sexual harassment, discrimination and abuse, creating what she called a “hostile, toxic and intolerable work environment” that led to her resignation.

Third Circuit says undated mail-in ballots may be thrown out, overturns Pa. lower court ruling

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PHILADELPHIA – The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has overturned a lower court ruling which had decided that undated mail-in ballots must be accepted as valid votes by all county boards of election in Pennsylvania, after the Republican Party’s state and national wings appealed the initial ruling – a decision likely to head to the U.S. Supreme Court on appeal and have tremendous import in November’s presidential election, which will once again see the Keystone State as a battleground.

Greenberg Traurig Announces Elevation of Real Estate Attorney David B. Lipner to Shareholder

By The Penn Record |
Global law firm Greenberg Traurig, LLP elevated David B. Lipner, a member of the firm’s Real Estate Practice, from associate to shareholder.

Judge suggests dismissal for N.J. man who alleged Pa. authorities sabotaged his pro boxing event

By Nicholas Malfitano |
HARRISBURG – A New Jersey man who launched legal action against the Pennsylvania State Athletic Commission and its personnel – alleging they conspired against him to prevent him from holding a professional boxing card in Harrisburg – may have his case dismissed, according to a federal magistrate judge’s recommendation.

Plaintiffs in class action wage dispute case against U.S. Steel seek remand to state court

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PITTSBURGH – Counsel behind a class action complaint which alleged U.S. Steel violated the Pennsylvania Minimum Wage Act (PMWA) by not paying employees for the time they spent showering and walking to their worksites, among other pre- and post-work activities, is opposing the suit’s removal to federal court and seeking it to be remanded to the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas.

Judge who declared Educator Discipline Act unconstitutional awards plaintiff $36K in legal fees

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PHILADELPHIA – A federal judge who ruled that a Bucks County man would be granted a permanent injunction against enforcement of the provisions of Section 17.2 of Pennsylvania’s Educator Discipline Act – a statute which he felt criminalized the disclosure of truthful information connected to the filing of an educator misconduct complaint with the Commonwealth’s Department of Education – also awarded more than $36,000 in legal fees from the Bucks County District Attorney to the plaintiff.

Colwyn Borough set to defend itself from malicious prosecution suit, after default was set aside

By Nicholas Malfitano |
PHILADELPHIA – The Borough of Colwyn is ready to defend itself from litigation brought by a Delaware County man, who alleged 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.

Duane Morris' Melissa Ruth Honored as a Lawyer on the Fast Track, Firm Recognized as Awards Finalist by The Legal Intelligencer

By The Penn Record |
Duane Morris LLP has been recognized across three categories of The Legal Intelligencer’s 2024 Pennsylvania Legal Awards.

Bucks County files major lawsuit versus Big Oil, charges companies misled public about climate change impacts

By Nicholas Malfitano |
DOYLESTOWN – Bucks County has launched litigation against several oil companies and the American Petroleum Institute, charging that the defendants collectively misled the public about the burning of fossil fuels and its catastrophic effect on climate change, the effects of which have damaged County residents.