Transit employees have been awarded over $1 million each in a lawsuit filed after workers lost their jobs for refusing Covid vaccines on religious grounds.
A mother whose teen son died of suicide after he fell in love with an AI chatbot filed a lawsuit against the company that created it, alleging her son was "groomed."
The Central Park Five, who now refer to themselves as the "Exonerated Five", have filed a defamation lawsuit against Donald Trump, claiming he falsely accused them of killing someone during a 1989 case that didn't involve any deaths, according to a report.
A San Jose neurologist is suing a Los Gatos Thai restaurant, alleging that an appetizer she was served at the restaurant was spicy enough to cause her "permanent" internal damage.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has filed a lawsuit against a UT Southwestern associate professor and physician, accusing her of administering gender transition treatments to minors, marking the state's latest move concerning transgender-related issues.
The parents of a Massachusetts student are suing his school, claiming his civil rights were "violated" after he was punished for using AI to help with a class project.
The former law enforcement officer with the Crawford County Sheriff's Office allegedly violated the civil rights of a man he arrested in 2022 and will now serve time in a federal prison medical facility.
A Tennessee man is suing state troopers for $1 million after being wrongfully arrested for DUI in Monroe County, as they insisted he was "probably high" despite his sobriety and passing all tests.
A New Jersey couple has been barred from suing Uber following a car crash that left them with life-changing injuries because their daughter agreed to terms & conditions on the UberEats app.
More than a year after an inmate was allegedly raped and beaten to death by his cellmate inside a Philadelphia prison, his family is demanding the government be held accountable.
The judge ruled that the officers were protected by qualified immunity, which exempts government workers from liability in many cases when there is no established precedent showing that their actions were wrong.
The FDOH issued an emergency order revoking Dr. Thomas Shaknovsky's license after he allegedly cut out 70-year-old William Bryan's liver instead of his spleen.