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COOK COUNTY RECORD

Saturday, May 18, 2024

Scott Holland News


Judge: Woman fired for improperly issuing drivers' permit OK to keep suing IL Sec. of State for discrimination

By Scott Holland |
A Black woman who formerly worked for the Illinois Secretary of State's office was fired after improperly issuing a drivers' permit to a friend. She sued for discrimination, in part because her white male colleagues weren't fired for allegedly doing the same thing

Federal judge: Samsung must face 'mass arbitration' of biometrics claims

By Scott Holland |
The electronics giant had argued the collective filing of tens of thousands of individual claims at the same time amounted to an attempt to extract a class action-style settlement, despite arbitration agreements forbidding class actions

Judge won't dismiss Chicago's complaint vs Monarch law firm, contractor over debt resolution work

By Scott Holland |
Chicago City Hall alleged Strategic Financial Solutions attempted to use Monarch Legal Group's law license to shield itself from the city's lawsuit over alleged fraudulent debt settlement offers

Little Caesars will end BIPA class action for nearly $7M, lawyers to get $2.3M

By Scott Holland |
Little Caesars workers who used fingerprint time clocks in Illinois are in line for $545 checks

Federal judge says Chicago woman, backed by anti-gun groups, can't use courts to force changes to state gun laws

By Scott Holland |
The lawsuit, led in part by the Brady Center for Gun Violence, alleged failure to use existing policy causing PTSD in children of Black city neighborhoods with elevated violence rates

State Farm can't total out class action lawsuit by Black agents accusing discrimination

By Scott Holland |
Federal judge says it is too soon to allow State Farm to end the class action claims

Judge says lawsuit over United vaccine policy struggles to find the grounds to stay aloft

By Scott Holland |
A Chicago federal judge granted a grou p of United Airlines workers a few extra weeks to amend their complaint to try again to show how United's Covid vaccine mandate rules amounted to religious discrimination or violations of a federal genetic information privacy law.

Appeals panel says $5.2M fine in FTC credit monitoring scam litigation can stand

By Scott Holland |
Judges also corrected an error in an earlier judgment that may have allowed the federal government to improperly claim a portion of the funds meant for restitution

Class action accuses State Farm of refusing burglary, theft claims, especially for Black customers

By Scott Holland |
Aurora woman says insurer wouldn't make white clients jump through as many hoops to process a claim of loss from theft or burglary

People search websites agree to pay $10M settlement to end privacy class actions

By Scott Holland |
Lawyers stand to get 35% of the funds. Individual payouts will vary by state, and whether claimants can prove someone searched their name and then bought a subscription with one of the online people search companies

Appeals panel agrees Walgreens can't yet force Prime to help in fraud lawsuit from Blue Cross parent

By Scott Holland |
Ruling affirms Cook County judge's determination that Walgreens would need to first lose vs Blue Cross before it could try to force Prime Therapeutics to shoulder some of its potential liability in the case accusing Walgreens of allegedly committing fraud by allegedly boosting drug prices charged to Blue Cross

Federal appeals panel vacates $57M fee award in $181M settlement ending chicken price-fixing class action

By Scott Holland |
Chicago federal appeals judges said objectors were right to argue a judge failed to give weight to evidence that the plaintiffs' lawyers have agreed to accept lesser amounts in other class action lawsuits on the West Coast

Ex-McDonald's security chief can continue lawsuit vs McDonald's, CEO for alleged discrimination, retaliation

By Scott Holland |
Federal judge won't dismiss complaint of man who says burger giant set him up to fail after he questioned allegedly racist remarks about Chicago gun violence from McDonald's CEO

Ex-McDonald's workers get another chance to sue over fast food giant's 'no-poach' employment policy

By Scott Holland |
Women say corporate guidelines kept them from obtaining better wages at different locations. A federal judge had dismissed the potentially massive class action lawsuit, describing it in part as an attempt by lawyers to cash in on a "jackpot" of fees, but was ordered by an appeals court to take another look

Judge will leave it to jury to 'decide who to believe' in big court fight over egg prices

By Scott Holland |
Kraft and other commercial food processors allege multi-prong antitrust conspiracy in which egg producers allegedly shipped eggs overseas at low prices to allegedly drive up prices in the U.S.

Appeals panel: DuPage SWAT officer injured in training exercise can keep $7.5M from trial vs tactical gear maker

By Scott Holland |
Safariland failed to convince 7th Circuit judges it deserved a new trial or to pay less to deputy injured in training exercise involving Safariland's 'breaching rounds,' which are designed to destroy door locks, knobs and other metal hardware

Appeals panel says Pritzker order may shield nursing homes from negligence lawsuits during Covid

By Scott Holland |
Families of decedents sued Briar Health Services over loved ones' deaths, but the court said they may be immune from those lawsuits under an executive order issued by Gov. JB Pritzker under Illinois' Emergency Management Association in spring 2020

University of Chicago to pay $13.5M to end class action over alleged elite school financial aid collusion

By Scott Holland |
Deal leaves 16 other elite universities to face claims they participated in a 'cabal' to limit financial aid awards to minimize competition for students

Appeals panel agrees FOIA can't force Chicago to demand annual reports from waste haulers

By Scott Holland |
Chicago Recycling Coalition strikes out on attempts to force City Hall to produce documents from third-party waste haulers that should have been filed every year under a city ordinance

Appeals panel: Courts should place 'heavy thumb on scale' to let defendants make 'copyright trolls' pay

By Scott Holland |
The U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals said a federal judge erred in denying the Cremation Society of Illinois' request that Live Face on Web pay its attorneys' fees after the Cremation Society prevailed in court