| NEWS
by: Motley Rice
Aviation attorney Mary Schiavo comments on Air France Flight 447 as speculation continues about whether the plane's black boxes will ever be found in the recovery effort.
| NEWS
by: Motley Rice
A brief filed on May 29, 2009, before the U.S. Supreme Court by the U.S. Solicitor General may enable several members of the Saudi royal family to avoid a 9/11 lawsuit.
| NEWS
by: Motley Rice
Aviation attorney Mary Schiavo talks to CNBC about Air France Flight 447 as the mystery surrounding the plane's crash generates questions about the safety of air travel.
| NEWS
by: Motley Rice
After the Justice Department filed a brief before the U.S. Supreme Court supporting the Saudi's request to be removed from a 9/11 lawsuit, those filing the lawsuit voiced their concern over what kind of message the Obama administration is sending to terrorists.
| NEWS
by: Motley Rice
Motley Rice 9/11 clients are angered that Obama's administration appears to support the Saudi royal family's efforts to defeat the lawsuit charging it with allegedly helping to finance the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
| NEWS
by: Motley Rice
Several family members of 9/11 victims have issued a statement on behalf of the 9/11 Families United to Bankrupt Terrorism in response to the Solicitor General's refusal to support the 9/11 families' Petition for Writ of Certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court.
| NEWS
by: Motley Rice
Aviation attorney Mary Schiavo tells Kansas City, MO's KCTV how alcohol adversely affects aviation safety and says that alcohol is the top contributing factor to air rage on commercial airlines.
| NEWS
by: Motley Rice
Aviation attorney Mary Schiavo comments on the FAA's enforcement of airline compliance following testimony on the fatal crash of Continental Connection Flight 3407.
| NEWS
by: Motley Rice
Aviation attorney Mary Schiavo is featured on CBS' Evening News with Katie Couric regarding the safety of regional carrier flights and says that a lack of pilot training may be to blame for recent crashes.
| NEWS
by: Motley Rice
The House Commerce Committee's health subcommittee is holding a hearing today on the Medical Device Safety Act that, if passed by Congress, will override the Supreme Court decision in <i>Riegel v. Medtronic</i> that currently keeps consumers from suing medical device companies over FDA-approved devices.