Reuters: Class action watchdog blasts $33 mln legal fee bid in controversial Verizon surcharge deal
Reuters covered HLLI challenging forum shopping tactics that could result in plaintiffs' lawyers getting $8 million in undeserved legal fees.
Reuters covered HLLI challenging forum shopping tactics that could result in plaintiffs' lawyers getting $8 million in undeserved legal fees.
Hamodia, a popular Orthodox Jewish newspaper, interviewed our co-founder, Ted Frank, about the possibility of bringing civil lawsuits against organizations who engaged in traffic-blocking protests.
The New York Post highlighted the Hamilton Lincoln Law Institute's unique legal strategy for possibly suing organizations who engaged in traffic-blocking protests.
Jason Riley wrote about the possibility of suing anti-Israel traffic-blocking protestors, as HLLI co-founder Ted Frank suggested.
The New York Post wrote about the chair of Harvard's antisemitism task force being accused of antisemitism.
Alison Frankel wrote about HLLI's successful appeal of a $3.2 million attorneys' fee award in the Wawa Data Security settlement, where the district court awarded attorneys more than the class.
Forbes profiles the Hamilton Lincoln Law Institute and its director Theodore H. Frank. William Baldwin explains how class action settlements work, and why Ted “is not a popular figure in the litigation bar.”
Cook County Record: The panel vacated the award and remanded the request for legal fees, suggesting Durkin reappropriate the weight given to auction bids and Ninth Circuit litigation while also allowing him to re-evaluate Andren’s request to order additional discovery on the expert reports class counsel submitted to bolster their request.
“We’re grateful for the opinion, and hope it will ultimately result in the class getting more money,” said Ted Frank, an attorney for Andren as well as the director of the Hamilton Lincoln Law Institute and the Center for Class Action Fairness.
Ted Frank, director at the Hamilton Lincoln Law Institute and the Center for Class Action Fairness, on Wednesday said they hoped the ruling "will ultimately result in the class getting more money."