Francis And Mailman, Pc
Recent News About Francis And Mailman, Pc
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Class action accuses Trans Union of allowing consumers to be wrongly sanctioned as terrorists, drug dealers, other criminals
The lawsuit seeks to make Trans Union pay those excluded from a recent class action settlement limited by a U.S. Supreme Court ruling -
Northwestern students can't sue after school closed campus over COVID, but charged full price tuition, judge says
A federal judge in Chicago said the students failed to provide a contract showing Northwestern University ever guaranteed in-person learning -
Class action denied in 'misleading' debt collection case vs Midland Credit Management
A Chicago federal judge has turned aside, for now, an attempt to turn a dispute over a debt collection into a class action, saying the evidence supplied by plaintiffs in the case - a collection letter which allegedly violated federal law - is not enough to justify the request to expand the lawsuit to include others who may have received similar letters. -
Judge refuses class action vs lawyers, IT vendor accused of using crash reports to drum up business
Saying plaintiffs would be hard pressed to demonstrate precisely how otherwise-protected information may have ended up on police vehicle crash reports, a Chicago federal judge has refused to allow a class action lawsuit to proceed against St. Louis-based personal injury firm Meyerkord & Meyerkord, accused of purchasing traffic crash reports and using personal information from those reports to solicit business from potential clients. -
Judge: Man has standing under Spokeo to sue lawyer who used his crash report to solicit him
A Chicago federal judge has cleared the way for a man to continue his lawsuit against a Chicago lawyer he has accused of buying traffic crash reports to improperly obtain his personal information to then offer to represent him in any legal actions involving his auto accident. -
Judge: LexisNexis can be sued under federal privacy law for selling crash reports to lawyers
A federal judge will allow an Illinois couple to continue their lawsuit against online information provider LexisNexis and a subsidiary company, saying the couple had done enough to establish they may be able to prove the companies violated federal law by selling traffic crash reports to personal injury lawyers, who then used the information in the reports to send targeted marketing materials to offer their legal services should those involved in the traffic accidents wish to sue.