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COOK COUNTY RECORD

Thursday, October 3, 2024

Latest News


Appeals panel says son of Glenview police officer who died at work not entitled to his father's full salary

By Scott Holland |
Ruling restores February 2018 pension board decision to dismiss application from officer's ex-wife seeking full benefits equal to 100% of the officer's salary. The board awarded the child 50%

Appeals panel agrees woman waited too long to sue her ex-employer for reading her private Facebook messages

By Scott Holland |
Woman said she was demoted and fired for complaining about her company and bosses. But the appeals court agreed with the employer that she waited two months too long to file her lawsuit

William Dorsey and Kenneth Ottaviano Named Notable Gen X Leaders in Accounting, Consulting, and Law by Crain's Chicago Business

By Press release submission |
Blank Rome LLP is pleased to announce that partners William J. Dorsey and Kenneth J. Ottaviano, who serves as chair of the Chicago office, have been named Notable Gen X Leaders in Accounting, Consulting, and Law 2022 by Crain's Chicago Business.

Federal court stops class action lawsuit cold vs Trader Joe's over "cold-pressed" juice labeling dispute

By Mary Haydock |
In the ruling, the judge cited Trader Joe's compliance with federal food safety guidelines to say consumers should be aware of the additional processing the juice undergoes after it is pressed

Reed Smith’s Ellis and Petersen selected to Crain’s Chicago Business list of Gen X leaders

By Press release submission |
Peter Ellis, global chair of Reed Smith’s litigation and dispute resolution department, and Matthew Petersen, managing partner of the firm’s Chicago office, have been named to Crain’s Chicago Business’s Gen X Leaders in Accounting, Consulting and Law list

Lawyers ask judge to sign off on $42M Grubhub settlement over investor losses, award them $12.6M in fees

By Scott Holland |
Class complaint alleges company didn't disclose it was losing ground to food delivery competitors

Appeals court: Journalist can resume lawsuit vs ex-River North landlord for eviction allegedly in retaliation for news stories

By Dan Churney |
Appellate judges said Loop North News publisher Steven Dahlman has established he may have been compelled to sign a release form under threats by a Marina City property manager, so the landlord can't use that agreement to escape Dahlman's lawsuit

Leveraging Mental Strength in Your Law Practice on December 13, 2022

By Press release submission |
Please join us for this four-part series designed to help lawyers and legal professionals avoid burnout and increase resilience — improving individual well-being, decision-making and client service.

Fox subpoenas documents from Chicago, Cook County over possible past issues with Smartmatic voting systems

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Neither the county nor the city are being sued. The subpoenas were filed as part of Smartmatic's $2.7B suit vs Fox over news reports amplifying Trump vote fraud claims

Chicago can't scrap class action accusing city of wrongly seizing, selling cars over unpaid parking tickets

By Scott Holland |
A Chicago federal judge ruled plaintiffs can continue their lawsuit accusing the city of improperly taking their cars because the city may not have sent enough notices to people whose vehicles were being seized

It’s a Wrap! Year End Review and 2023 Forecast on December 14, 2022

By Press release submission |
Please join the final program in our webinar series, Labor and Employment Law Developments: Staying on Top of Your Game.

Class action: United Airlines targeted by class action over security face scans of passengers

By Mary Haydock |
The complaint accuses United Airlines of violating Illinois' Biometric Information Privacy Act, potentially exposing the airline to a massive payout

New Democratic justices will shape Supreme Court, but how far left they will take the court, state law remains to be seen

By Stephanie Jaquins |
Employers, taxpayers should not count on friendly rulings from the new state Supreme Court, warns the director of the Illinois Chamber of Commerce

Dennis Fitzpatrick Elected for 10th Term as Clausen Miller President and CEO

By Press release submission |
Clausen Miller is proud to announce the re-election of Firm President Dennis D. Fitzpatrick. Mr. Fitzpatrick will serve his 10th term as President and CEO in 2023.

Doctors can't be sued over improper resuscitation of man's father: Appeals panel

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Illinois appeals court says a man who tried to sue University of Illinois Hospital for violating his father's DNR can't just swap in doctors for the hospital to keep his lawsuit in Cook County court

Federal judge: Permissive Cook County court the place for most of class action vs CVS over passport photo face scans

By Scott Holland |
U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman said most of the claims in the suit need to go to state court, because plaintiffs don't argue they were actually harmed by the scans, only that CVS may have violated technical notice and consent provisions within Illinois' biometrics law

Attorney General Raoul Calls for Equitable and Efficient Implementation of Inflation Reduction Act

By Press release submission |
Attorney General Kwame Raoul joined a coalition of 12 attorneys general in calling on the Department of Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to equitably implement the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, create good-paying green jobs and help states transition to a clean energy economy.

Ogilvie Transportation Center ticketing agents claim Union Pacific didn't do enough to keep them safe from Covid

By Mary Haydock |
Four separate plaintiffs, all represented by Chicago attorney Clifford Horwitz, claim they were infected by Covid because Union Pacific didn't comply with OSHA or CDC recommendations

Gun rights groups plan lawsuits if Illinois lawmakers enact semi-auto weapon ban

By Greg Bishop, The Center Square |
Illinois Second Amendment rights supporters predict Illinois Democrats will lose big in court if they attempt to enact new bans on the sale of certain kinds of firearms, including the AR-15

Appeals panel: Companies that wait to put plan in place for handling fingerprint scans can face massive class actions

By Dan Churney |
An appeals court has ruled companies must secure worker consent before requiring fingerprint scans, not afterward, under Illinois' biometrics privacy law