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COOK COUNTY RECORD

Saturday, April 27, 2024

Latest News


Federal Court

Buffalo Wild Wings in lawsuit over boneless 'wings': No dog meat in our hotdogs either

By John O'Brien |
CHICAGO (Legal Newsline) - Buffalo Wild Wings is continuing the ridicule of the man who sued it because he expected "boneless wings" to be actual chicken wings with the bones removed.

Federal Court

Judge: Ill. Supreme Court's biometrics decision doesn't apply to class action over yearbook photos

By John O'Brien |
CHICAGO (Legal Newsline) - A Chicago federal judge won't second-guess herself for tossing a proposed class action lawsuit that accused Ancestry.com of violating the Illinois Right of Publicity Act.

Federal Court

'A big fuss about a little lemon': Judges toss class actions against lemon-flavored products

By John O'Brien |
CHICAGO (Legal Newsline) - Chicago federal judges are left with a sour taste in their mouths by class action lawsuits that want more lemon in lemon-flavored products.

Federal Court

Refiled: Class action claiming boneless wings at B-Dubs should be called nuggets

By John O'Brien |
CHICAGO (Legal Newsline) - The lawyer trying to sue Buffalo Wild Wings because boneless wings are made out of breast meat has filed his second complaint, hoping to cure procedural issues that killed the first one.

Federal Court

Appeals court says Waukegan teacher can't sue a teachers union she claimed she joined by mistake

By Dan Churney |
A federal appeals panel has ruled a Waukegan teacher can't claim she mistakenly joined the teachers union because she thought membership was mandatory, saying government workers' right to refrain from union membership does not override a voluntarily signed agreement to join.

Federal Court

Judge recommends discipline for Chicago lawyer with record of alleged 'substandard conduct' and of accusing judges of racial bias

By Dan Churney |
A federal judge did not hold back in describing the conduct of a Chicago lawyer with an allegedly troubled history, who "badly mishandled" a lawsuit against City Hall, recommending the lawyer face disciplinary action that could include barring her from practicing in Chicago federal district court.

Federal Court

Judge, who formerly served on IL State Police board, recused from case vs woman accused of using Pritzker-ties to oust ex-ISP Board director

By Jonathan Bilyk |
According to a court order, new U.S. District Judge Nancy Maldonado recused herself from the court fight over claims that former ISP Merit Board executive Jenny Thornley called on Gov. JB Pritzker to remove her ex-boss because he was investigating fraud allegations against her. Maldonado had served on the Merit Board, appointed by Pritzker in 2019

Federal Court

Father, son lose bid to turn suit over CPS Buddhist meditation program into religious freedom class action

By Scott Holland |
Family sued over aspect of 'Quiet Time' program that featured Buddhist transcendental meditation and ran from 2015-2019 in certain Chicago Public Schools. Students were encouraged to participate, and the family said it violated their religious rights

Federal Court

Appeals court rejects new hearing over whether hospitals can sue IL state govt over slow, reduced Medicaid payments

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Judges on the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals said the state's concerns over liability risks and potential significant new regulatory burdens are "exaggerated"

Federal Court

Class of McDonald’s consumers suing over PFAS object to transfer request to NDIL

By Heather Isringhausen Gvillo |
A class of consumers suing McDonald’s Corporation over the alleged presence of polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in wrappers argue that the case belongs in the Southern District of Illinois as it is the only case with an Illinois resident, who happens to live in Madison County.

Federal Court

General Medicine seeks summary judgment in suit alleging fraudulent Medicare billing scheme

By Heather Isringhausen Gvillo |
General Medicine seeks summary judgment in a lawsuit alleging it engaged in a fraudulent billing scheme, based on arguments that previous investigations found that its billing practices were compliant with regulations.

Federal Court

SCOTUS decision may doom feds' efforts to sue Townstone Financial over execs' talk radio speech: New filing

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Chicago mortgage broker Townstone Financial says federal banking regulators overreached in using anti-discrimination regulations to sue them for comments made on the radio by Townstone executives

Federal Court

Seventh Circuit Judge Michael Kanne dies; Served on federal appeals court for 35 years

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Kanne, regarded as a conservative originalist, was appointed to the court in 1987 by President Ronald Reagan

Federal Court

How 'concrete' an injury is 'emotional distress?' Federal appeals court grapples with question

By Jonathan Bilyk |
A group of four federal appeals court judges says the Seventh Circuit was wrong to toss out a woman's class action claims that a creditor should pay for inflicting "emotional distress" when it sought to collect a "zombie debt"

Federal Court

SCOTUS: Airline ramp workers exempt from arbitration mandates, more class actions vs transportation employers inbound?

By Jonathan Bilyk |
The U.S. Supreme Court says Southwest Airlines ramp workers are involved in interstate commerce, and should be given exemption under federal law from mandatory arbitration clauses in their employment contracts

Federal Court

Appeals panel rules schools not automatically liable under federal civil rights law when school workers sexually abuse students

By Scott Holland |
The U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals ruled, en banc, that a Madison, Wisconsin, school district can't be sued for the sexual abuse of a middle school girl because the school's principal wasn't specifically aware of the abuse, but took action to address concerns of a school security guard's "grooming" actions

Federal Court

Appeals panel says states can make lawyers join the bar based on 'undermined' law, but SCOTUS might say 'no'

By Dan Churney |
A Chicago federal appeals court has ruled it is constitutional for Wisconsin to make lawyers belong to the state bar association, despite a lawyer's contention his dues back political causes he does not support

Federal Court

Appeals panel: Owners of vehicles impounded for unpaid Chicago tickets can protect cars under bankruptcy proceedings

By Scott Holland |
City can tow and keep cars only after obtaining 'final determinations of liability,' a judicial process, meaning the city can't just keep the cars of people who owe large amounts of unpaid parking and traffic tickets, and filed for bankruptcy protection

Federal Court

Judge reprimands feds, says Obama-era bad-faith actions in case vs Kraft 'troubling for future' settlement talks

By Jonathan Bilyk |
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission violated a confidentiality provision in its settlement with Kraft and Mondelez to end a regulatory action over alleged wheat market manipulation, to score political PR points. The agency says its commissioners aren't bound by any such deals

Federal Court

Chicago cop's family given another try at pressing ADA discrimination claims vs city over cop's COVID death

By Scott Holland |
The lawsuit alleges the Chicago Police Department didn't honor a transfer request in March 2020 from a Chicago narcotics division officer who had cystic fibrosis and diabetes. He died from COVID at the end of March 2020.