- Shehnaz Bhujwala | January 29, 2008 1:26 PM |
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MiscellaneousCalifornia's Supreme Court has denied the University of California's appeal in Kashmiri v. Regents of University of California, awarding thousands of professional students $40 million enrolled in UC programs whose tuition fees were increased during the 2002-2003 school year, despite the Regents' promise to hold fees steady.The class action lawsuit was filed in San Francisco July of 2003, when...
- Cheryl Buchanan | January 26, 2008 4:15 PM |
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MiscellaneousOr maybe it would be more appropriate to say that they are the last lying? But, I've always had trouble with the whole question over when to use "lying" or "laying" in a sentence. If one means not telling the truth and the other means hiding out in the weeds and avoiding responsibility and continuing to hope it will all just go away... well then I guess they both work. Its just a matter...
- Miriam Schimmel | January 22, 2008 12:27 PM |
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Wrongful DeathWhen you seek medical attention from a hospital emergency room, are you at risk for further injuries or even death BEFORE ever receiving treatment? While much of the current health care debate centers on seeking a solution to the problem of getting coverage to the uninsured and the underinsured (those who have health care insurance, but the coverage fails to provide them with adequate and...
- Michael Eyerly | January 18, 2008 7:10 PM |
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MiscellaneousProposed budget cuts in California will adversely affect the elderly, children, environment and workers. California has a $14.5 billion budget gap. That's a fair amount of money. To close that gap the state could raise taxes or cut its spending. Because the Governor does not want to raise taxes, he has proposed across the board spending cuts. To cut that much from the state's budget,...
- Shehnaz Bhujwala | January 14, 2008 3:35 PM |
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MiscellaneousVeterans of the current wars in Iraq and Afghanistan shall have their day in court, after all. US District Court Judge Samuel Conti has cleared a national class-action lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the US Department of Veteran's Affair's claims system. The ruling affirms the rights of veterans with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) to sue in federal court over the huge...
- Lance Rubin | January 09, 2008 6:12 PM |
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MiscellaneousA woman who was assaulted in the parking lot at Dodger Stadium by a fan has sued Dodger Stadium for her injuries. When is a landowner responsible for injuries to patrons when those injuries are caused by someone else -- not by the facility?Assaults can happen any time, anywhere. A woman heading off to Chavez Ravine to attend a Dodger game never thought her trip would end as it did - with her...
- Cheryl Buchanan | January 05, 2008 6:13 PM |
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MiscellaneousHaving been raised a Catholic, I believe in forgiveness, reconcilliation, and second chances. Having spent five years working on child molestation cases and coming to a deeper understanding of the psychosis that compels adults to habitually torture and victimize children, and the lifelong damage that those children struggle with as adults, I also believe we have a responsibility that preempts...
- Michael Eyerly | January 04, 2008 7:51 AM |
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MiscellaneousStates adopt standard licensing requirements to curb abusive lending practices by mortgage brokers The so-called sub-prime mortgage crisis (by no means have the problems and abusive lending practices been limited to sub-prime borrowers only) has spawned efforts on a number of fronts to curb abusive lending practices. The most recent effort mandates a standardized application, licensing and...
- Miriam Schimmel | January 03, 2008 2:12 PM |
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MiscellaneousRecent news stories across the country illustrate how the denial of employees' rights continues to be a problem, and sadly, it seems that the victims are too often workers who work hard for low hourly pay. Some of the biggest offenses include not allowing employees their legal right to take rest breaks or lunch breaks, or not paying employees properly for overtime or vacation time. Employers...
- Shehnaz Bhujwala | January 03, 2008 11:38 AM |
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MiscellaneousA 60-year-old man who filed a lawsuit against the family of a 7-year-old boy who collided with him on a ski slope last year near Vail, Colo. has become the target of an media backlash. Attorneys are split as to the minor's potential liability in the case. The lawsuit seeks $75,000 for medical expenses associated with a dislocated shoulder and rotator cuff injury the man says was caused by the...