by: Motley Rice
Motley Rice securities lawyers Marlon Kimpson and Badge Humphries will both be on hand at the upcoming OPAL Financial Group's annual Investment Education Symposium held in conjunction with the Louisiana Trustee Education Council (LaTec).
by: Motley Rice
Motley Rice is proud to again support the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation (MARF) as a "2012 Legal Partner for a Cure for Mesothelioma." A national non-profit organization dedicated to finding a cure for mesothelioma and eradicating the devastating disease, the Foundation takes the following actions:

by: Motley Rice
According to a release distributed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the International Operations Division of the Huntsville Center in Alabama is working to establish a recycling program in Afghanistan which combines waste management with economic and social development.
by: Mary F. Schiavo
Former Inspector General for the US DOT, a pilot and aviation lawyer offers most common, and possibly best bits of information for air travelers to know
by: Motley Rice
On Friday, Jan. 20, 2012, a U.S. congressional committee was again asked to further "examine medical devices that have developed serious defects after being implanted in patients."
by: Donald A. Migliori
Thousands of people have suffered life-altering injuries and insurmountable medical bills resulting from a failed metal-on-metal hip replacement devices.
by: Motley Rice
On Tuesday, Jan. 31, 2012, a swimming pool heater allegedly caused a carbon monoxide leak that killed a Rhode Island man and seriously injured others at a Corridor G Holiday Inn Express in South Charleston, West Va.

The carbon monoxide levels at the hotel were measured at 500 to 600 parts per million. According to authorities, any reading over 30 parts per million is cause for concern. The victims were staying on the hotel's fifth floor, but carbon monoxide levels were high in other parts of the hotel according to the South Charleston Fire Chief,

by: Motley Rice
On Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2012, Metro Vancouver employer Arthur Moore was sentenced to 60 days in jail by the B.C. Supreme Court for failing to adequately protect his employees while they handled asbestos. According to court documents, Moore often hired young, recovering addicts and knowingly exposed them to asbestos during demolition work without providing the necessary protective equipment.

by: Motley Rice
Human rights lawyer Don Migliori has been invited to speak at the 2012 Office for Victims of Crime (OVC) Mass Violence and Emergency National Training Conference in Jacksonville, Fla., on Feb. 2, 2012.
by: John E. Herrick
On Jan. 12, 2012, the California Supreme Court ruled in O’Neil v. Crane Co. that a manufacturer may not be held liable for harm caused by another manufacturer’s product (the cancer-causing material). With its decision in O’Neil v. Crane Co., the California Supreme Court is going down what some believe to be a very slippery slope.