Personal Injury Roundup No. 10 (10/17/08)
It’s a beautiful week here in New England and it was a great week for me (if you’ll pardon the self-congratulation), as my colleagues have voted to grant me tenure starting next academic year. It was a lively week in TortLand, too…
Reform, Legislation, Policy
- Apologies in Canada [Sault This Week via Point of Law]
- Senate committee critical of EPA’s role in Libby, Montana [Pump Handle]
New Lawsuits
- Six Flags wants to add more defendants in Kentucky Kingdom case; plaintiff undergoes another surgery [WLKY.com]
- Indianapolis Colts receiver Marvin Harrison apparently isn’t facing criminal charges, but is getting sued for alleged role in a shooting [ProFootballTalk.com]
- Patients sue hospital for treatment by heroin-addicted doctor [Newsday]
Trials, Settlements & Other Ends
- Three years after filing, lawsuit over alleged wrong color hair dye dismissed [AP]
Appeals
- Supreme Court sounds skeptical of FTC’s role in “light” cigarette claims [SCOTUSblog, TortsProf]
- Georgia Supreme Court permits thimerosal claim against Wyeth, rejects vaccine preemption argument [Pharmalot]
- More about Levine and preemption more generally [Sebok @ Writ]
Miscellaneous
- Tort lawyer by day, referee by…Sundays. [TortsProf]
- Medical blogger subpoenaed over comment [NY Personal Injury Blog]
- “Yo-Yo” amusement ride (swinging chairs) recalled [CPSC]
- Another amusement ride incident: Carny ride starts without warning; parent and toddler hang on; toddler dropped…and caught. Man. [Local6.com, video]
- “For people like Oprah, lawsuits are a part of life.” [Richard Roeper @ Sun-Times]
–BC
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