by: Motley Rice
Motley Rice LLC is honored to announce that U.S. News – Best Lawyers, has once again named the firm in its 2016 National and Metropolitan, First-Tier Rankings for Mass Tort Litigation and Class Actions.
by: Motley Rice
E-cigs have seen an increase in popularity in recent years, and are often marketed as a “safer” alternative to cigarettes. However, in public health circles, scientists and physicians have already questioned the safety of e-cigarettes.
by: Motley Rice
Three Motley Rice medical device and drug lawyers have been appointed by federal judges to serve on Plaintiffs’ Steering Committees in national multidistrict litigations (MDL) for Laparoscopic Power Morcellators, IVC Filters and Zofran.
by: Jodi Westbrook Flowers
Whenever ruthless acts of terrorism occur like those that rocked the world last week in Paris and Beirut, as civilized persons, we mourn for those injured and murdered and for all those who lost loved ones.
by: Mary F. Schiavo
Get ready – the busiest travel day of the year is coming and there are new FAA rules and recommendations which airlines are expected to implement (and it’s about time).
by: Motley Rice
Motley Rice has filed a product liability action on behalf of Randi Johnston of Centerville, Utah. The suit alleges permanent, life-scarring and post-crash injuries as a result of the alleged overly volatile explosion of the Takata PSDI inflator.
by: Motley Rice
A Hawker H25 private business jet crashed into a residential building in Akron, Ohio at approximately 3 pm ET on Tuesday, Nov. 10. Seven passengers and the two pilots were killed.
by: Motley Rice
In its 2015 New England edition, Super Lawyers® Magazine profiled Motley Rice member and 2015 Rhode Island Super Lawyer Don Migliori as a trial lawyer who “creates change by ‘challenging truth’”.
by: Joseph F. Rice
Owners are understandably demanding answers as to what is next and what their options are against VW for this massive fraud at the consumers’ expense.
by: Robert J. McConnell
It was more than 35 years ago that residential leaded paint was outlawed in the United States. Banning the paint, however, didn’t remove it from the walls of millions of homes and it didn’t stop U.S. companies from manufacturing leaded paint to be sold in other countries.