Tressler LLP represented the Board of Elections for the City of Chicago in a complaint that challenged the inclusion of an advisory referendum initiated by the City Council on the March 19, 2024 primary ballot.
Tressler attorney Matthew J. O'Malley was recently featured in a popular article by Josh Karp for the 2024 Illinois Super Lawyers Magazine: "The Crosstown Classic: Two Attorneys Reflect on Their Cubs and Sox Fandoms."
The College of Law at Illinois (Illinois Law) recognized Tressler with an Employer Honor Roll award, which distinguishes firms that hired multiple graduates from their law school within the past three years.
The plaintiffs are seeking to expand a "no-injury" standard that had been created by the Illinois Supreme Court for big money class actions under Illinois' biometric privacy law to now apply to class action lawsuits under Chicago's landlord-tenant ordinance
Tressler LLP is pleased to announce that Rachel Bassett, Taylor Brewer, Kiera Fitzpatrick, Jamie Gende, Shannon Harvey, Sarah Elizabeth Melendez, Jerome Murphy, Matthew O’Malley, Samantha Shafer and Stacey Wilkins were recently selected by their peers for inclusion in the 2024 Edition of Best Lawyers: Ones to Watch in America™.Learn more about this group of experienced attorneys below.
Tressler LLP is proud to announce that William K. McVisk has been selected as the 2024 Lawyer of the Year for Chicago: Litigation - Insurance by U.S. News and World Report and Best Lawyers®.
We are pleased to announce that Tressler attorneys Rachel V. Bassett, Kathleen Hart, Matthew J. O'Malley, Anita St. Pierre and Stacey L. Wilkins have been selected as 2023 Illinois Rising Stars. Less than 2.5 percent of attorneys in Illinois receive this prestigious honor each year.
Tressler LLP is proud to announce that the firm has been named to the U.S. News - Best Lawyers® 2023 "Best Law Firms" list for National Tier 1: Insurance Law for the first time.
Massachusetts Bay Insurance argued it needed to pay only $25,000 for a 'single occurrence' under the dentists' 'disease contamination' coverage claim, not for each Covid-related closure ordered across nine states